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#5
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Take a look at the piston and tell me what is wrong with this picture....
![]() Yeah, nice factory alignment of the ring gaps. All eight pistons had the gaps on every compression ring and every oil ring lined up with each other. It defies logic. Every kid learns in high school shop class that you have to stagger the ring gaps in different locations to avoid loss of compression and high oil consumption. All I can think is this was some type of job action or purposeful sabotage by the guy at the engine assembly plant back in 1975. [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/no.gif[/img] No wonder the car never had any ooomph when you hit the gas. (Original machine marks on the piston skirts look nice, though) [img]<<GRAEMLIN_URL>>/smile.gif[/img] We removed the compression rings and checked the ring gaps: Cyl 1: .032, .030 Cyl 2: .032, .032 Cyl 3: .030, .032 Cyl 4: .032, .035 Cyl 5: .035, .032 Cyl 6: .030. .035 Cyl 7: .028, .028 Cyl 8: .025, .030 I believe the spec is supposed to be .019 plus/minus .010. |
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