m_steiger
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2013
- Messages
- 100
I recently rebuilt my 1995 Mercruiser 5.7......Only about 5 hours total on the engine. Just yesterday went to the lake and motor was hydrolocked. The exhaust manifolds finally gave out after being cracked and JB welded. I have new ones on the way ordered from here. While I has the manifolds off I decided to do a compression test just to see where I was at after the rebuild. I used chrome-moly rings for the rebuild which I have since learned is not a good idea on marine engines, as I should have used standard iron rings. Since the rebuild I have been having very excessive blow-by, to the point where it was pressurizing the crankcase and forcing the oil to some up and drip out of the dipstick tube. I took one side of the valve cover breather off and felt the pressure release. I was thinking I had a cylinder or 2 which the rings weren't completely sealing due to the chrome-moly rings. Now that I have done a compression test I have found all my cylinders to be between 175psi at the low cylinder and 215psi at the highest cylinder. I had not used any oil in the cylinders when taking this test and it was done using a quality Snap-on gauge. Ive always heard you should have all cylinders within 10% compression of each other however I am at 20% difference between my high and low side. Do you guys think I have anything to be alarmed about or give it more time for the low cylinders piston rings to seat?