Racer-X (and others) That is interesting the A2 Diesel Bentley advises against wet compression test where other sources advise it. Is the A2 Bentley manual an official Volkswagen of America service manual? FWIW, the A1 Bentley is not an official VWoA service manual, and I know of several errors, and in general although better than most manuals, it is not the "end all" of reference literature.
Re: cranking RPM with and without compression... Keep in mind that the energy used to push the piston up against compression during the compression stroke is energy that is returned to the crankshaft during the power stroke - assuming there were no blowby at all and also no loss of energy from compression heat conducted away. So the corrolary is that if energy loss from heat conduction was negligible and the cylinder was sealing pretty well, then we shouldn't expect a big change in cranking RPM by relieving compression in 1 or more cylinders.
Why have I ruled out fuel injection as a cause of the low compression: fuel injection and injection timing is not a factor used during the compression test, but yet the dry compression results, at 300-320, came out much lower than they should have been (400-500). I also know thereis fuel getting to the injectors when cranking (as it occasionally sputters and there is a smell of diesel and occasional smoke puff out the exhaust), and the car runs like timing is set right and everything else is fine when it is warmed up and idling and running.
Racer_x is right about 1 Tablespoon being a large quantity of our IDI VW Diesels' combustion chambers. I did a calculation of the combustion chamber size to verify this. 1600cc / 4 cyl / (23 + 1) = 16.66 cc combustion chamber size.
Quote from: "fspGTD"Racer_x is right about 1 Tablespoon being a large quantity of our IDI VW Diesels' combustion chambers. I did a calculation of the combustion chamber size to verify this. 1600cc / 4 cyl / (23 + 1) = 16.66 cc combustion chamber size.Well, if you want to be precise, it's 1588cc / 4 cylinder / (23 - 1) = 18cc in the combustion chamber. There's 396cc of displacement in the cylinder and 18cc above the piston. So compression is (396+18) : 18 = 414 : 18 = 23:1.
Quote from: "racer_x"Quote from: "fspGTD"Racer_x is right about 1 Tablespoon being a large quantity of our IDI VW Diesels' combustion chambers. I did a calculation of the combustion chamber size to verify this. 1600cc / 4 cyl / (23 + 1) = 16.66 cc combustion chamber size.Well, if you want to be precise, it's 1588cc / 4 cylinder / (23 - 1) = 18cc in the combustion chamber. There's 396cc of displacement in the cylinder and 18cc above the piston. So compression is (396+18) : 18 = 414 : 18 = 23:1. :shock: Yep your math is correct although not easy for the non mathematical to follow due to lack of steps and strictly speaking a shortage of parentheses (brackets)... I assume that the Bentley is referring to the American tablespoon which is a pesky 2/3 of our Limey one and so about 9cc. or 50% of the chamber size. Why not use one of your puny teaspoons or about 3cc. :twisted: If this wet test is going to work properly we n
Quote from: "racer_x"Quote from: "fspGTD"Racer_x is right about 1 Tablespoon being a large quantity of our IDI VW Diesels' combustion chambers. I did a calculation of the combustion chamber size to verify this. 1600cc / 4 cyl / (23 + 1) = 16.66 cc combustion chamber size.Well, if you want to be precise, it's 1588cc / 4 cylinder / (23 - 1) = 18cc in the combustion chamber. There's 396cc of displacement in the cylinder and 18cc above the piston. So compression is (396+18) : 18 = 414 : 18 = 23:1. :shock: Yep your math is correct although not easy for the non mathematical to follow due to lack of steps and strictly speaking a shortage of parentheses (brackets)... I assume that the Bentley is referring to the American tablespoon which is a pesky 2/3 of our Limey one and so about 9cc. or 50% of the chamber size. Why not use one of your puny teaspoons or about 3cc. :twisted: If this wet test is going to work properly we need to drive the car half onto the side walk inorder to be sure of spreading the oil over the entire compression ring including the gap! else oil is all in a 'corner':twisted:
Quote from: "Mark(The Miser)UK"Quote from: "racer_x"Quote from: "fspGTD"Racer_x is right about 1 Tablespoon being a large quantity of our IDI VW Diesels' combustion chambers. I did a calculation of the combustion chamber size to verify this. 1600cc / 4 cyl / (23 + 1) = 16.66 cc combustion chamber size.Well, if you want to be precise, it's 1588cc / 4 cylinder / (23 - 1) = 18cc in the combustion chamber. There's 396cc of displacement in the cylinder and 18cc above the piston. So compression is (396+18) : 18 = 414 : 18 = 23:1. :shock: Yep your math is correct although not easy for the non mathematical to follow due to lack of steps and strictly speaking a shortage of parentheses (brackets)... I assume that the Bentley is referring to the American tablespoon which is a pesky 2/3 of our Limey one and so about 9cc. or 50% of the chamber size. Why not use one of your puny teaspoons or about 3cc. :twisted: If this wet test is going to work properly we need to drive the car half onto the side walk inorder to be sure of spreading the oil over the entire compression ring including the gap! else oil is all in a 'corner':twisted:Puny? Hah! Actually, our respective volumetric measurements have a close and intertwined history.Back in the 18th century there were two gallons in common use in both Britain and North America...the wine and the imperial gallon. The wine gallon was based on a 7" wide by 6" tall cylinder and was the basis of taxation (smaller gallons made for more tax revenues...), while the imperial version was based on 10 pounds of water (a wine gallon weighs about 8.33 lbs).When the USA went their own way from Britain public sentiment was pretty much against anything with the "imperial" ring to it, so the fledgling government chose the wine gallon as a standard measure of volume. Later it was formalized to exactly 231 cubic inches. (A cylinder 7" wide and 6" tall is 3.5^2 x 3.14159 x 6 = 230.9 cubic inches.)In any case, the wine gallon was always volume-based and fractionally divided (the imperial gallon was weight based). A gallon has 4 quarts, each of which has 4 cups of 16 tablespoons (a 4th of a 4th).Pretty cool, eh?