Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

G'day lads,

I'll cut to the chase, I bought a really cheap R32 with an RB20 that is only running on 5 cylinders. I have done a compression test and all cylinders are around 127-130 psi, which I think is pretty good? Except for cylinder #3. It has 0 psi compression. And yes I mean 0

I was wondering how I can determine whether it is top or bottom end problem? I am going to embark on taking the head off as I have a feeling that a valve is not closing correctly on that cylinder, if this is the case it should be a fairly easy job. But if I was to rip the head off with the engine still in the car, than it could get a bit messy.

Is there a quick way of trying to work out whether the piston is cracked/rings gone without removing any parts? I have tried the squirting oil into the cylinder and doing the compression to no avail. As it has no compression anyway.

Cheers :D

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/
Share on other sites

You should get a cylinder leakage test done to determine where the compression is going.

this is where you get the engine on TDC No 3 cyl and feed compressed air into the cylinder and listen where its coming from i.e. remove oil cap if you can hear a fair bit of air then it has excessive blow by on that cyl (prolly cracked rings), if the majority of air is coming from radiator cap then blown head gasket, from intake tube then the intake valve is not sealing, from exhaust then the exhaust valve is not sealing.

you must make sure the piston is at TDC compression stroke so that the valves are closed and when you feed the compressed air in make sure the crank doesn't try to spin back a turn or forward as it will if its slightly off TDC. Also where the compressed air is fed in through the spark plug hole it must have a tight seal (use the compression tester rubber or tube and seal it) so you can hear the air inside the motor.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/#findComment-1695745
Share on other sites

You should get a cylinder leakage test done to determine where the compression is going.

this is where you get the engine on TDC No 3 cyl and feed compressed air into the cylinder and listen where its coming from i.e. remove oil cap if you can hear a fair bit of air then it has excessive blow by on that cyl (prolly cracked rings), if the majority of air is coming from radiator cap then blown head gasket, from intake tube then the intake valve is not sealing, from exhaust then the exhaust valve is not sealing.

you must make sure the piston is at TDC compression stroke so that the valves are closed and when you feed the compressed air in make sure the crank doesn't try to spin back a turn or forward as it will if its slightly off TDC. Also where the compressed air is fed in through the spark plug hole it must have a tight seal (use the compression tester rubber or tube and seal it) so you can hear the air inside the motor.

Thanks champ I thought that's how I could do it. Whats a good way to get the #3 cyl to TDC with the motor still in the car?

Also how would you be able to determine the exhaust valve is leaking with the full exhaust on? Other ways?

Cheers again

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/#findComment-1695792
Share on other sites

Yeah, pull out the third spark plug and insert a piece of straight wire, turn the crank clockwise so you can see when the piston reaches the top (when the wire stops moving up). Remove the cam covers and look at the cam lobes over the third cylinder, make sure they are not pushing the valves down at all (valves closed). When you have this its at TDC cylinder 3 compression. The piston gets to the top twice in a cycle once on compression (valves closed) and once on exhaust stroke (exhaust valves open)

Good luck

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/#findComment-1696135
Share on other sites

give the head bolts a thourough inspecton for anything obvious but they should be alright.

try scotts auto one, repco, coventry auto parts for just the head gasket but it would be worth getting a full VRS kit that contains all the gaskets you'll need, get these from engine specialists possibly the above mentioned.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/#findComment-1698694
Share on other sites

The head most definitly needs to come off if its a valve prob.

A VRS kit is like a bag full of all the seals and gaskets you will need like intake gasket, exhaust gasket, head gasket, cam cover gasket/s, thermostat gasket, water pump gasket (if you change it), new cam seals, 'd' rubbers, cam cover bolt seals and any other gaskets and o-rings you may need to disturb to get the head off. Its cheaper than buying each seperately and way better than using the old ones. Be sure to buy a little bottle of 'permatex' or somthing similar to put on the water gaskets (thermostat, water pump, o'rings on water pipes etc).

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/93896-5-cylinder-rb20/#findComment-1701455
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • Forgot to include this but this is the mid section of my steering rack that looks like it has a thread/can be turned with that notch mentioned in the post:
    • Hey everyone, Wanted to pick some brains about this issue I'm having with rebuilding my 33 rack (PN is 49001-19U05). All of the tutorials/videos I've seen online are either R34 or S Chassis racks which seem to be pretty straightforward to disassemble but this process doesnt carry over to my rack. Few of the key differences that I've noted The pinion shaft on the other racks bolt on with 3 torx bolts: Whereas my rack bolts on with 2 allen head bolts: These changes are pretty inconsequential but the main difference is how you pull the actual rack out of the housing. The other skyline/s chassis racks can be taken out by tapping the rack out of the body with a socket and it just slides right out. I'm unable to do that with my rack because there's a hard stop at the end that doesn't let the seal/shaft be tapped out. Can also see a difference in the other end of the rack where mine has a notch that looks like you're able to use a big wrench to unthread 2 halves of the rack whereas the other racks are just kinda set in with a punch. My rack: Other racks: TLDR; Wanted to know if anyone has rebuilt this specific model of steering rack for the R33 and if there were any steps to getting it done easier or if I should just give this to a professional to get done. Sorry if this post is a bit messy, first one I've done.
    • I would just put EBC back on the "I would not use their stuff" pile and move on.
    • Can I suggest you try EBC directly again and link them to as many competitor catalogues as you can to show their listing is incorrect, eg https://dba.com.au/product/front-4000-series-hd-brake-rotor-dba42304/ If you have access to an R33 GTST VIN and your VIN, you could also use a Nissan Parts lookup like Amayama to show them the part number is different between 33 GTST and 34 GTT which may get their attention
    • So i got reply from EBC and they just this site where you can clearly see those 296mm fronts on R34 GTT. I send them photos and "quotes" that 296mm are not for 34 GTT and they are too small. But it will be very hard to return them cuz nobody here knows 100% and they just copy those EBC catalogue :-D https://ebcbrakesdirect.com/automotive/nissan/skyline-r34
×
×
  • Create New...