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Old 04-01-2002, 05:04 PM   #1
brennecke
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Question compression ?

Checked my compression, and all the cylinders make 130-145 psi. Somebody told me I should be getting 185-215. How bad off am I? The motor seems to run plenty strong.
71 350 4bbl
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Old 04-01-2002, 05:20 PM   #2
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Well it depends on what engine it is and what compression ratio it has. That is about normal for a stock smogger with some miles on it. I think 150 is what they run at best. As long as the cylinders are within 20psi of each other you should be fine.
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Old 04-01-2002, 05:51 PM   #3
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You are fine on a stock 71 350......
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Old 04-01-2002, 08:24 PM   #4
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It should be prox 140-150. Anything more than 160 will probably require high-octane gas. 185-215 and you'd have a diesel! Be sure to remove all the plugs and hold the throttle open when you test it.

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Old 04-02-2002, 09:51 AM   #5
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Rock on! I thought it felt strong. The biggest difference is only 15. I didn't hammer on the throttle either. I just waited for it to stop increasing on the meter. Pretty good for a stock engine with 106K on then.
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Old 04-02-2002, 02:30 PM   #6
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Is there a way from this info to determine what compression ratio you are running? If you know what cc the heads are. My engine was rebuilt several years ago and I dont know what pistons were put in them.

Thanks
Dave

[This message has been edited by Custom 68 (edited April 02, 2002).]
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Old 04-02-2002, 04:08 PM   #7
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diesel engine compression is 220 or 225 if you look in specs 150 is average normal for most all sbc excp hi-pef 60's musclecar engines

to determine cr you owuld need ot find volume of entire chamber with head gasket and all, first with pisotn at bdc and then at tdc and divide bdc volume by the tdc volume, IE if you had 850cc at bdc and 100 at tdc then youd have 8.5cr

you could get pretty damn close if you know the volume of the head chamber(probably 58, 75, or 76cc most likely) and then added a few more for the head gasket cylinder opening volume and added those to the cubic volume of the entire cylinder with the piston at bdc and then divided that sum by the sum of the combined volume of the head chamber and cylinder gasket opening volume and cylinder volume with piston at tdc
if you measure the head chamber volume yourslef then make sure you put in spark plug, and use TSX plugs to take up more room and increase the cr a little bit

good luck

[This message has been edited by Fast68Chevy (edited April 02, 2002).]
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Old 04-02-2002, 09:24 PM   #8
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Thanks Fast Sounds like a lesson in Math...
Dave
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Old 04-02-2002, 10:01 PM   #9
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The 461 " Olds that I ran in the longhorn had 190-195 psi......didnt like pump fuel too much! It turned out to be a little wild for my bro inlaws cutlass vert also.....after he did a few doughnuts on the street,he sold it......69 longhorn.
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Old 04-02-2002, 10:20 PM   #10
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you can't really tell what the compression ratio is from cranking pressure, i used to drive a dirt track car that was 9 to 1 compression with a 2bbl and cranking pressure was about 205, it depends on what the cam timing is, that motor ran on 105 octane an made 550hp, not bad for a 2bbl!!!

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Old 04-02-2002, 10:27 PM   #11
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I agree with Rob, the overlap of the cam will make a world of difference. No overlap would give you alot more, where lots of overlap would reduce your cranking pressure.

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