So I assume your current starting problems are even with new glowplugs.
I think that 3 out of 4 glowplugs melting and not 4, is simply happenstance. :idea:
[ You were obviously for that period of time operating right on the edge of melting and not meltng the plugs. It is my opinion that the turbine may be OK. Remember the 3 or more chunks are not the product of a break off from a clash, like a piece of valve, but a red hot drip. I think once in the form of a mobile drip it would stay red easier than when still attached to the heatsink of the glowplug, so it/they may have passed through the turbine still red , and if hitting the turbine a lot softer than the blades, which although can become red themselves are designed not to melt... See what I'm getting at? :?
The compression results are low, but uniform, and not out of the range of some engines happily chuntering around out there :shock:
Interestingly when measuring a diesel, how do the compression testers take account of the significant additional volume created by the 18" tube and the bourdon bit too?
I've thought of putting welding wire down the pipe to fill the gap in. :idea: :idea:
[Maybe, thinking about it, it's important to have the gauge release valve right next to the 'well-stuffed' injector dummy and not at the gauge end... I have a feeling my gasser one has it by the sparkplug, but the diesel one has it on the wrong end up by the gauge] :shock:
Perhaps some have re-ringed for nothing :roll: