since work is calmed abit and JAE is getting closer, time to finally commence fixing the last stage of the engine.
first drove out to the country road to warm up n test compression in a secluded area.
here's the compression history so far, seem to have stablised. also the piston top is now 90% dry so oil rings prob wearing in good but plugs still has a slight hint of white burnt oil residue and oil consumption has slowed alot but it still drops abit weekly.
for the wet compression test I injected a small syringe of oil into each cylinder (exactly the same 1-2 tablespoon) and on 1st crank attempt it peaks at bout 15.5bar hmm seems bit high?
so reset the gauge and leaving it connected, I repeat the test 3 times, each attempt the reading would get abit lower as some of the oil pool is evacuated out under each crank so it seals the rings less.
this means I cannot reliably & consistently compare wet & dry readings directly cos its very dependent on how much oil is in the cylinder to help seal the rings momentarily.
but the important factor with compression readings is that all the cylinder compressions are consistently the same within the spec, and for the wet & dry tests they're pretty even so that's good
while the gearbox oils warm I also tried to test the LSD preload condition by lifting each front wheel one at a time and turning it with the torque wrench but both sides show no resistance at all so I'm concerned that once again the belleville ring may have shattered AGAIN?
draining oil
some more bits on the gearbox plug
removed the cam cover to check the hot valve clearances
Mmm the regular oil changes have kept the insides nice n clean
plugs with teh white oil staining residue
measured the hot valve clearances and the result is good:
top left section is the min, max & ideal hot/cold clearance values for the valves.
top right is a colour coded scale of those value limits.
in the inlet and exhaust graphs, the upper values are from during the break-in period (good inlet clearance but loose exhaust clearances)
the lower section of the graphs are from tday after the break-in period with the corrected shims (inlet clearance is perfect and exhaust clearance may need to loosen by a fraction)