Compression Numbers

xzeror

Active Member
Oct 18, 2009
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Miramar, FL
Buying a 2jz and it does not have the starter nor flywheel. So the seller assured me that the engine did indeed have compression and decided to hand crank it over and with 3 crank by hand he got the compression to 130 in each cylinder. Hes garanteeing that there is atleast 150+ in each cylinder, and that it read 160 when he did a compression test when he first got it.

What i want to know is if hand cranking does indeed give lower numbers.
 

te72

Classifieds Moderator
Staff member
Mar 26, 2006
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You ever turn an engine over by hand? I seem to remember hearing air leaking out of the engine when doing that a while back. Wouldn't surprise me if you can't get proper compression numbers without the starter doing the hard work for you, but like was suggested, a leakdown is probably the best idea here.
 

suprahero

naughty by nature
Staff member
Aug 26, 2005
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Roll Tide
Turn the motor over by hand? No thank you. I won't even use Vonda's new broom because I can't find where the push button start is. Manual labor FTL.


Buying a motor from someone is easy..........if you trust them. If they're not a reputable shop or someone you trust then I'd shop around. Good luck.
 

mkiiichip

New Member
Sep 10, 2007
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Its a 2jz, what are you worried about?

Id be more interested in sludge buildup under the cam covers. Thats a sure fire way to find if the motor was taken care of, as far as maintenance goes.

And the guy that told you he did a compression test while cranking the engine by hand, is a asshat. I would bring my compression gauge and a breaker bar and ask him to duplicate those numbers on just one cyl.
 

te72

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Mar 26, 2006
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mkiiichip;1767918 said:
And the guy that told you he did a compression test while cranking the engine by hand, is a asshat. I would bring my compression gauge and a breaker bar and ask him to duplicate those numbers on just one cyl.

I'd be surprised now that I think about it. When doing a test, aren't you supposed to crank the engine for something like 4-5 seconds with the starter? No way in hell a person could turn over an engine anywhere near as fast, certainly not enough to generate meaningful compression...
 

steveyblack

Member
Jun 21, 2007
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Takes about 10-15 minutes to hook up a flywheel and started. Just hook the starter up to a battery then jump it to crank it over. Test then. Id still do a leakdown though ;)
 

dirosa

New Member
Apr 9, 2011
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Toronto
it's probably easier to just get an electric impact gun (battery power or corded) and just crank it over from the crank pulley bolt no? the battery powered impact guns are so good now, i've seen guys change wheels with them, so getting the engine to turn for 5 seconds a cylinder should be doable.
 

steveyblack

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Jun 21, 2007
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dirosa;1768734 said:
it's probably easier to just get an electric impact gun (battery power or corded) and just crank it over from the crank pulley bolt no? the battery powered impact guns are so good now, i've seen guys change wheels with them, so getting the engine to turn for 5 seconds a cylinder should be doable.

please dont do this, I see a thread in the future asking why his crank bolt is seized.
 

dirosa

New Member
Apr 9, 2011
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if you pull the spark plugs, and insert the compression tester 1 cylinder at a time, there is no way you'll be creating more than 200 ft-lbs of torque........and search around, crank pulley bolts are supposed to be ridiculously tight, this will in no away torque it down more than most already are.
 

te72

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Mar 26, 2006
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You can't break the torque on the crank bolt on a JZ by hand if the engine is on a stand or out of the car, the spec on that bolt is over 200ft-lbs. Tried doing that myself, and the entire engine started rotating, nearly tipped the stand from the weight...