I know I should have turned it over first, I've done it every other time, but I guess it just takes once, lesson learned. Would a bent valve be whats causing it to overheat.I figured a bent valve would just cause a dead cell. Like I said I have a week to come up with every reason for why it wont run before I will have a chance to work on it again.
you're right. the compression should be significantly lower on the bad cylinder if you've bent the valve enough. like i said though some people are just lucky. say for example the piston is right at the bottom, and has enough momentum from the starter to slam upwards then the chances of a bent valve are greater. but if the piston is already halfway or more up there, then the chances are lower (but there can be even slightly bent valves which still work alright... i guess they just wear out the valve guides a bit quicker?)
do you know any of the history of the engine you swapped in? did you check/replace the t-stat and inspect the water pump? its best to check the obvious first though. clean the grounds/contacts for the temp gauge wiring, and then confirm the rad is kicking on (i like my princess auto infrared thermometer to check the temps

), and then once all that is done, the dreaded t-stat change while hopefully not getting coolant in the face

don't forget that you need to 'burp' the cooling system if you haven't already done so. i just let mine run up to temp without the rad cap on while revving it a bit. a few minutes while up to temp should be enough to get the air out. you need to rev it too to get it flowing to push the air through.
i personally recommend coolant flushing as well. others may disagree, but IMO the heat transfer between bare metal to rusted/mineralized metal is much greater :wink:. i used prestone heavy duty flush. i had very good results when i did it to my car. the stuff that came out was this rusty brown colour! down right nasty!!! :lol: