00Beast wrote:Put in new plugs at least.
o.k cool.. but any thoughts on the compression test results ?

00Beast wrote:Put in new plugs at least.


Sirius wrote:Think about it. You’re tooling down the road in your Prius, knowing full-well that this thing being green is as big a sham as federally mandated ethanol-enriched gas, Russia pulling out of Ukraine, and Obamacare.




willwren wrote:Your motor is toast. Your rings are shot, causing MAJOR blow-by. Your PCV isn't big enough to handle it all.
Start looking for a new motor or car ASAP. I'd be concerned with a 10% change between dry and wet tests on a 3800. Your motor was severely abused at some point. I've NEVER seen ring/cylinder wear anywhere near the numbers you report.
When I say toast, I mean TOAST.
This is the cause of all your symptoms. The idiots at Firestone should STILL have checked compression before guessing.


I was curious about this as well.Mechanical Mike wrote:How much oil did you put in each cylinder for the wet test?






Mechanical Mike wrote:How much oil did you put in each cylinder for the wet test?

Jrs3800 wrote:The ash on the plugs as well as the low dry test readings lead me to believe the rings are shot... I would expect to see 170-190 dry on a 9.4 : 1 compression motor...

Did you not watch the video you posted?88bonnsse wrote:Mechanical Mike wrote:How much oil did you put in each cylinder for the wet test?
i had a 6 ounce squirt bottle, used about an ounce in each cylinder..
You only needed a few drops, not an ounce. You probably put in about 500x too much oil. But, like willwren said:88bonnsse wrote:here is the video.. good video too for anyone who wants to learn how to do this.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X_tbksFY ... 11F3F2282C
willwren wrote:I also suspect you used way too much oil in your wet test, but it doesn't really matter in the long run. Add the plug evidence in, and the deal is sealed.




willwren wrote:The PCV dispersion tube in the intake doesn't matter at all if it were missing or fell off in there. The PCV will still flow just fine. Start coming to grips with the fact that your motor is toast. We've very clearly laid out the diagnosis based on your troubleshooting.






willwren wrote:Forget the certified GM Mechanic. The 'acceptable' specs on compression per GM are very low. 99.9% of the motors on this Forum are significantly higher, and your plug condition sealed the deal. GM mechanics work on all types of motors, and don't have the luxury of specializing on the 3800 family alone. The 3800 is a notoriously 'tight' motor when compared to all others made by GM divisions. It's a unique animal.
Your compression sucks, you have the symptoms, your compression numbers back it up, and the plugs seal it's fate.




