HawkeyeGeoff
MSO Chicks
I've been on this platform for ~5 years now and I've never heard of anyone trying this...here's my story.
I am purchasing an 06' MS6 w/ 61k on the clock. We tested the compression and it came out the following:
Cyl1: 190
Cyl2: 180
Cyl3: 155 (went up to 170 with a cap of oil)
Cyl4: 190
@ALPINEST4RS suggested I try the following product since the car hadn't been driven really all that hard and might possibly have seized rings from carbon build up:
GM Top Engine Cleaner
We pulled the plugs, threw ~4oz in each cyl overnight, sucked out the super dark fluid with a pump, changed the oil (immediately after since a bunch obviously seeped past the #3 ring), fired it up...and here are the results.
Cyl1: 175
Cyl2: 175
Cyl3: 165
Cyl4: 180
Ah. Holy shit. These tests were all done when the engine was at operating temp. So from this we can gather that carbon build up CAN effect compression (positively or negatively). Cyl 1, 2 +4 were getting artifically higher compression and Cyl 3 was losing compression because of it. The numbers are much more uniform, which is what you want, and my butt dyno suggests a smoother car overall.
I will monitor the motor as I drive it more, I'm going to perform a driving cycle similar to that of a break in procedure and see if #3 comes up more. Limit it to ~10 psi and do lots of decel.
If your motor has highly varying compression and it sits a lot...it's time to give this a try before building or replacing the motor.
I am purchasing an 06' MS6 w/ 61k on the clock. We tested the compression and it came out the following:
Cyl1: 190
Cyl2: 180
Cyl3: 155 (went up to 170 with a cap of oil)
Cyl4: 190
@ALPINEST4RS suggested I try the following product since the car hadn't been driven really all that hard and might possibly have seized rings from carbon build up:
GM Top Engine Cleaner
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We pulled the plugs, threw ~4oz in each cyl overnight, sucked out the super dark fluid with a pump, changed the oil (immediately after since a bunch obviously seeped past the #3 ring), fired it up...and here are the results.
Cyl1: 175
Cyl2: 175
Cyl3: 165
Cyl4: 180
Ah. Holy shit. These tests were all done when the engine was at operating temp. So from this we can gather that carbon build up CAN effect compression (positively or negatively). Cyl 1, 2 +4 were getting artifically higher compression and Cyl 3 was losing compression because of it. The numbers are much more uniform, which is what you want, and my butt dyno suggests a smoother car overall.
I will monitor the motor as I drive it more, I'm going to perform a driving cycle similar to that of a break in procedure and see if #3 comes up more. Limit it to ~10 psi and do lots of decel.
If your motor has highly varying compression and it sits a lot...it's time to give this a try before building or replacing the motor.
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