MuddWeiser
New member
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- Truckee/CA
Im giving some love back to my M1009 (daily driver) and thinking about having the IP and Injectors rebuilt - total cost would be around $450. My truck is a daily driver and still runs fine, but the idle is getting rough and its starting to bother me...
So - I bought a really nice STE/ICE-R from a member of another forum and ran the PSI test today.
I would like to know what the compression (psi) should be in the cylinders of my truck AND if the following readings are "bad". I had a look through TM -34 in the "compression testing" section and it states 380-400 psi. I got NOWHERE NEAR that in my M1009.
Below are my results (psi)
Passenger Side (Rear to Front)
244
232
231
229
Driver Side (Rear to Front)
209
199
204
215
Just wondering if that looks suspicious to anyone else? Not even close to the 380-400 psi the TM refers to. It even sates that NO reading should be less than 380psi and that no cylinder reading should be less than 80% of the highest reading.
Aside from them ALL being less than 380psi; They are all pretty consistent... 80% of 244 is about 195 - so that 199 reading is CLOSE to being out of spec...
So is it worth having the IP and Injectors rebuilt or is this motor pretty much end of life? It only has 120k miles on it and oil changed regularly. So I was surprised to see the cylinders this far out of spec?
EDIT:
Sine the STE/ICE-R "transducer kit" does NOT come with a proper 10mm x 1.00 pitch adapter, I fabricated my own length of hose that fits properly in the glow plug hole and runs directly to the "pressure sensor" of the ste/ice-r... The original compression test adapter that comes with the ste/ice-r had a "pressure release valve". My fabricated hose did NOT.
After posting and thinking about this for a while I realized that the original compression hose had a "pressure relief" button that probably means it "traps" the pressure in the hose - since I was NOT using that -- I wonder if my results were "inaccurate"? As I was getting the 200-244psi reading from a single stroke instead of a combined 6 strokes...
I suspect that every revolution dumps the pressure out the exhaust valve before compressing the NEXT revolution and therefore my test is inaccurate since I wasn't building pressure in the hose from 6 combined strokes but rather individual strokes before it released out the exhaust valve?
Any thoughts on this?
So - I bought a really nice STE/ICE-R from a member of another forum and ran the PSI test today.
I would like to know what the compression (psi) should be in the cylinders of my truck AND if the following readings are "bad". I had a look through TM -34 in the "compression testing" section and it states 380-400 psi. I got NOWHERE NEAR that in my M1009.
Below are my results (psi)
Passenger Side (Rear to Front)
244
232
231
229
Driver Side (Rear to Front)
209
199
204
215
Just wondering if that looks suspicious to anyone else? Not even close to the 380-400 psi the TM refers to. It even sates that NO reading should be less than 380psi and that no cylinder reading should be less than 80% of the highest reading.
Aside from them ALL being less than 380psi; They are all pretty consistent... 80% of 244 is about 195 - so that 199 reading is CLOSE to being out of spec...
So is it worth having the IP and Injectors rebuilt or is this motor pretty much end of life? It only has 120k miles on it and oil changed regularly. So I was surprised to see the cylinders this far out of spec?
EDIT:
Sine the STE/ICE-R "transducer kit" does NOT come with a proper 10mm x 1.00 pitch adapter, I fabricated my own length of hose that fits properly in the glow plug hole and runs directly to the "pressure sensor" of the ste/ice-r... The original compression test adapter that comes with the ste/ice-r had a "pressure release valve". My fabricated hose did NOT.
After posting and thinking about this for a while I realized that the original compression hose had a "pressure relief" button that probably means it "traps" the pressure in the hose - since I was NOT using that -- I wonder if my results were "inaccurate"? As I was getting the 200-244psi reading from a single stroke instead of a combined 6 strokes...
I suspect that every revolution dumps the pressure out the exhaust valve before compressing the NEXT revolution and therefore my test is inaccurate since I wasn't building pressure in the hose from 6 combined strokes but rather individual strokes before it released out the exhaust valve?
Any thoughts on this?
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