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I got a bunch of 6.5 parts several years ago, and am finally getting around to installing them on my 1009. I have some questions about assessing engine condition and I am sure I will have more questions as I work through the swap, and will document everything here in the hopes it helps someone down the road. This has all been done before, so hopefully nobody is annoyed by seeing it again.
The truck has been a daily driver for 6 years and starts and runs great, but gets really terrible fuel economy. Like 11-13 mpg regardless of city/highway, and regardless of speed (60-80 mph does not seem to make a noticeable difference). I have new injectors and am working on sourcing a new IP (current one leaks badly), so hopefully that helps.
I just did a compression test following the procedure in -34 TM, but I didn't see anything in the TM about the engine needing to be hot. The truck had been sitting overnight so it was cold, and these were my results:
Cyl 1: 395 psi
Cyl 3: 380 psi
Cyl 5: 380 psi
Cyl 7: 405 psi
Cyl 2: 400 psi
Cyl 4: 420 psi
Cyl 6: 400 psi
Cyl 8: 405 psi
I saw some threads on here about how the engine should be hot, so I am going to go install the new glow plugs and drive it for a bit and try again and will post an update. But initially I am not too worried. It seems like everything is pretty much in the 380-400 psi range per the TM, with no more than 40 psi (10%) variation between cylinders.
I had previously posted a thread about oil pressure (here) where I was concerned about low hot oil pressure. I'm also hoping to double check that with a new manual gauge, and will post updates here instead of that thread.
Currently showing 30 psi idle / 40 psi driving when cold, and hot it drops down to 20-30 psi when driving 0-5 psi at idle. However the dash low oil light never comes on, so I don't think the 0-5 psi at idle is real. The light does come on at start up and goes out in a fraction of a second and sometimes stays up for up to a second on the first startup after an oil change, so I know the factory sender and light work. Engine has had clean oil changes (no visible metal) for 6 years and runs great, besides the poor fuel economy and suspect oil pressure gauge.
I have a big project on my Corvette going and am in the middle of starting a stressful new job, so I'm hoping to get a few more years of service out of this motor running ~8 psi of boost. Eventually I'll pull it to replace the bearings, do head gaskets/studs, inspect the timing set, and maybe send the block/heads off to the machine shop depending on how they look, but I don't want to do that today. Let me know if you think any of this sounds crazy of if you would do things differently.
EDIT: I am working on the injectors now and some of them are pretty tough to remove and the threads are pretty crusty. Is there any way to clean the threads in the block without a special tap? I am worried the new injectors wont thread in smoothly...
The truck has been a daily driver for 6 years and starts and runs great, but gets really terrible fuel economy. Like 11-13 mpg regardless of city/highway, and regardless of speed (60-80 mph does not seem to make a noticeable difference). I have new injectors and am working on sourcing a new IP (current one leaks badly), so hopefully that helps.
I just did a compression test following the procedure in -34 TM, but I didn't see anything in the TM about the engine needing to be hot. The truck had been sitting overnight so it was cold, and these were my results:
Cyl 1: 395 psi
Cyl 3: 380 psi
Cyl 5: 380 psi
Cyl 7: 405 psi
Cyl 2: 400 psi
Cyl 4: 420 psi
Cyl 6: 400 psi
Cyl 8: 405 psi
I saw some threads on here about how the engine should be hot, so I am going to go install the new glow plugs and drive it for a bit and try again and will post an update. But initially I am not too worried. It seems like everything is pretty much in the 380-400 psi range per the TM, with no more than 40 psi (10%) variation between cylinders.
I had previously posted a thread about oil pressure (here) where I was concerned about low hot oil pressure. I'm also hoping to double check that with a new manual gauge, and will post updates here instead of that thread.
Currently showing 30 psi idle / 40 psi driving when cold, and hot it drops down to 20-30 psi when driving 0-5 psi at idle. However the dash low oil light never comes on, so I don't think the 0-5 psi at idle is real. The light does come on at start up and goes out in a fraction of a second and sometimes stays up for up to a second on the first startup after an oil change, so I know the factory sender and light work. Engine has had clean oil changes (no visible metal) for 6 years and runs great, besides the poor fuel economy and suspect oil pressure gauge.
I have a big project on my Corvette going and am in the middle of starting a stressful new job, so I'm hoping to get a few more years of service out of this motor running ~8 psi of boost. Eventually I'll pull it to replace the bearings, do head gaskets/studs, inspect the timing set, and maybe send the block/heads off to the machine shop depending on how they look, but I don't want to do that today. Let me know if you think any of this sounds crazy of if you would do things differently.
EDIT: I am working on the injectors now and some of them are pretty tough to remove and the threads are pretty crusty. Is there any way to clean the threads in the block without a special tap? I am worried the new injectors wont thread in smoothly...
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