Interference engine problems need help
Discussion
Ok so I have a 1988 944 porsche non turbo sohc. So heres the problem timing belt jumped some teeth, I replaced it and put it back in time and now it wont start at all. I did a compression test and I got 0 compression all the way across. My question is what problems am i looking at? I realize valves are probly going to be bent but I'm looking for all possible problems. While I'm in there I want to know what else should I look for? Thanks ahead of time
9za4ck4 said:
Ok so I have a 1988 944 porsche non turbo sohc. So heres the problem timing belt jumped some teeth, I replaced it and put it back in time and now it wont start at all. I did a compression test and I got 0 compression all the way across. My question is what problems am i looking at? I realize valves are probly going to be bent but I'm looking for all possible problems. While I'm in there I want to know what else should I look for? Thanks ahead of time
most damage should be obvious when it's stripped.Head damage, valve guides, valve seats, piston damage....there could be quite a bit really.
or you could be lucky and just be valves.
Rather depends on whether it happened at 7000 rpm caning it down the bypass or at cranking speed doesn't it? Why are we guessing?
["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
Edited by Pumaracing on Tuesday 25th January 13:37
Pumaracing said:
Rather depends on whether it happened at 7000 rpm caning it down the bypass or at cranking speed doesn't it? Why are we guessing?
["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
Makes no difference. As long as you now have the timing right my guess would be bent valves, get the head off and have a look. ["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
Edited by Pumaracing on Tuesday 25th January 13:37
D_G said:
Pumaracing said:
Rather depends on whether it happened at 7000 rpm caning it down the bypass or at cranking speed doesn't it? Why are we guessing?
["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
Makes no difference. As long as you now have the timing right my guess would be bent valves, get the head off and have a look. ["That croc was going to eat me alive."
"Well, I wouldn't hold that against 'im. Same thought's crossed my mind once or twice."]
Edited by Pumaracing on Tuesday 25th January 13:37
Do you think the same damage is possible at idle with the car sitting stationary, as 7000rpm driving flat out ??
Ive seen catastrophic damage due to valves not doing what they are supposed to at high rpm. It would be physically impossible for that same damage to occur at idle.
If the belt breaks at low rpm, the cam will stop rotating almost immediately, usually with the valves on one cylinder on the rock and the valves on cylinders 90deg away partly open but sometimes not enough to cause damage, at high rpm, the cam keeps turning causing inevitable damage.
If there is no compression at all, it's not likely to be the timing, as with a single cam wheel driving the valve train, it's not possible to position the timing to give no compression at all.
Unfortunately, in my experience a belt that has jumped a few teeth does the most damage, as the engine keeps running while the valves are hitting the pistons, sometimes causing a valve head to break off and embed in a piston.
If there is no compression at all, it's not likely to be the timing, as with a single cam wheel driving the valve train, it's not possible to position the timing to give no compression at all.
Unfortunately, in my experience a belt that has jumped a few teeth does the most damage, as the engine keeps running while the valves are hitting the pistons, sometimes causing a valve head to break off and embed in a piston.
Edited by oakdale on Tuesday 25th January 23:37
What I'm saying is either way valves will meet pistons and damage will occur on an inteference engine. The level of damage is only evident once the head comes off, I've had cams / guides snapped at low RPM, but also very little damage at high RPM belt failure. The engine speed isn't a given as to what damage there might be, engine design more determines that.
Also if the belt fails the car will still drive the crank as long as the car is in gear and the clutch not depressed, doesn't take long to damage the valves / pistons.
D_G said:
What I'm saying is either way valves will meet pistons and damage will occur on an inteference engine. The level of damage is only evident once the head comes off, I've had cams / guides snapped at low RPM, but also very little damage at high RPM belt failure. The engine speed isn't a given as to what damage there might be, engine design more determines that.
Also if the belt fails the car will still drive the crank as long as the car is in gear and the clutch not depressed, doesn't take long to damage the valves / pistons.
If the cam has stopped in a position where the pistons can't hit them, it doesn't matter how long the crankshaft keeps turning for.Also if the belt fails the car will still drive the crank as long as the car is in gear and the clutch not depressed, doesn't take long to damage the valves / pistons.
Well I've checked the timing several several times just to make sure its in time. Because i kept thinking it was out of time still when I wasn't getting any compression. But it is in time and very dead on and still I'm getting no compression. Oh and I wasn't banging the rev limiter when it jumped teeth, I was casually driving and I do believe it was right a 3000rpms. Anyways I dont think that really matters though, But I was just going to replace the head with a new complete head. Does this seem like a smart idea or is that going to be a waste of money. I think what I'm trying to ask is whats the possibility of this engine being a complete loss?
9za4ck4 said:
Well I've checked the timing several several times just to make sure its in time. Because i kept thinking it was out of time still when I wasn't getting any compression. But it is in time and very dead on and still I'm getting no compression. Oh and I wasn't banging the rev limiter when it jumped teeth, I was casually driving and I do believe it was right a 3000rpms. Anyways I dont think that really matters though, But I was just going to replace the head with a new complete head. Does this seem like a smart idea or is that going to be a waste of money. I think what I'm trying to ask is whats the possibility of this engine being a complete loss?
my guess is depends on the cost to repair the damage compared with a second hand engine?? .. pull the head just a few bent valves= happy days!!! ... valves embeded in pistons,bent rods, smashed guides, and chewed seats= FUBARed..... maybe Edited by powerstroke on Wednesday 26th January 09:00
Edited by powerstroke on Wednesday 26th January 09:02
powerstroke said:
9za4ck4 said:
Well I've checked the timing several several times just to make sure its in time. Because i kept thinking it was out of time still when I wasn't getting any compression. But it is in time and very dead on and still I'm getting no compression. Oh and I wasn't banging the rev limiter when it jumped teeth, I was casually driving and I do believe it was right a 3000rpms. Anyways I dont think that really matters though, But I was just going to replace the head with a new complete head. Does this seem like a smart idea or is that going to be a waste of money. I think what I'm trying to ask is whats the possibility of this engine being a complete loss?
my guess is depends on the cost to repair the damage compared with a second hand engine?? .. pull the head just a few bent valves= happy days!!! ... valves embeded in pistons,bent rods, smashed guides, and chewed seats= FUBARed..... you did check the cam isnt broken??Edited by powerstroke on Wednesday 26th January 09:00
Edited by powerstroke on Wednesday 26th January 09:02
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
If the cam has stopped in a position where the pistons can't hit them, it doesn't matter how long the crankshaft keeps turning for.
Except when a valve head comes off and pulverises the entire engine. So it matters quite a bit how long the crank continues to turn.oakdale said:
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
If the cam has stopped in a position where the pistons can't hit them, it doesn't matter how long the crankshaft keeps turning for.
Except when a valve head comes off and pulverises the entire engine. So it matters quite a bit how long the crank continues to turn.Yes, one that there will always be a position where there is contact when the belt fails.
Hence the name "interference"
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
If the cam has stopped in a position where the pistons can't hit them, it doesn't matter how long the crankshaft keeps turning for.
Except when a valve head comes off and pulverises the entire engine. So it matters quite a bit how long the crank continues to turn.Yes, one that there will always be a position where there is contact when the belt fails.
Hence the name "interference"
Edited by oakdale on Wednesday 26th January 20:58
oakdale said:
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
stevieturbo said:
oakdale said:
If the cam has stopped in a position where the pistons can't hit them, it doesn't matter how long the crankshaft keeps turning for.
Except when a valve head comes off and pulverises the entire engine. So it matters quite a bit how long the crank continues to turn.Yes, one that there will always be a position where there is contact when the belt fails.
Hence the name "interference"
Edited by oakdale on Wednesday 26th January 20:58
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