I tested the compression on my 1.9lTD this afternoon. The results are: 420-520-520-400It was rebuilt 100,000km ago.What do I do?It's my daily driver and I work with my car... I can't work on it a lot.Please help me :?
Given you've got a 1.9, you've got hydraulic lifters so there is no valve lash to check.I'd guess the bulk of the compression variance from one cylinder to the next is due to ring leakage. This could be isolated by performing a dry and then a "wet" leakdown test; any difference would be the leakage past the rings. Remaining leakage would be from "other" sourecs (valve most likely, but also sometimes cracked head, leaking head gaskets, etc can allow combustion chamber pressure to escape.)Ring sealing is a pretty complicated topic, and there are a multitude of reasons that could explain why some cylinders have better sealing rings than others. It could be as simple as some cylinders happen to have rings that have spun around such that their end gaps are all lined up while others have staggered end gaps.Keep in mind that starter motors aren't designed to run continuously for more than about 10 seconds. That should be also all it takes to get a good compression reading on one cylinder. I'd recommend limiting your cranking during the compression test to maybe 10 seconds at a time... and allow a minute or so at least in between cranking to let the starter motor cool.