Today I removed the head on the XJ11 to look for causes of very low compression Read here: http://www.xs11.com/forum/showthread.php?t=32359 & I had a bugger of a time getting it off. I had to resort to pounding upward on the head with several different pieces of wood & a mallet. Problem was on the left side of the head, it seemed like it was being held by a bolt but all the nuts were freed.
The problem getting the head off was it turns out the stud between exhaust 1&2 was rusted and somehow the shaft was filled with rust. Doesn't make sense on an aluminum head engine but this stud and the one between exhaust Cyl 3&4 were all rusted. The one between 3&4 came out of the block instead of the nut unscrewing. Below you see how the shaft in the cylinder is filled with rust where the head came off, the stud does not move... It was all I could do to pound the head upwards to force it off. You can see the rust embedded into the threads from the pressuers generated when I pounded the head up & the rust in the channel got jammed into the threads.
Here is a shot of #2 cylinder where the low compression was found:
Here's Piston 1 which cylinder had pretty good compression
Bottom of the head showing the valves:
Here are the valves for cylinder 2 which had poor compression as did 3:
And here's Valves for 4 which had good compression:
I'm going to try and remove the cylinders tomorrow & to prepare, I squirted quite a bit of kroil along the rust surrounding & holding the stud in place in hopes it'll not give me too much resistance.
Any idea why those two studs rusted like they did & more, there does not seem to be enough rust on the shaft of the studs to account for the volume of rust that was in the shaft. Literally there were chunks or compressed rust I found 1/2" long & semicircular where they fell off when the head came off. All from that stud.
Amazing...
Thoughts on the above & anything looking off with the cylinder & valves?
Thanks!
The problem getting the head off was it turns out the stud between exhaust 1&2 was rusted and somehow the shaft was filled with rust. Doesn't make sense on an aluminum head engine but this stud and the one between exhaust Cyl 3&4 were all rusted. The one between 3&4 came out of the block instead of the nut unscrewing. Below you see how the shaft in the cylinder is filled with rust where the head came off, the stud does not move... It was all I could do to pound the head upwards to force it off. You can see the rust embedded into the threads from the pressuers generated when I pounded the head up & the rust in the channel got jammed into the threads.
Here is a shot of #2 cylinder where the low compression was found:
Here's Piston 1 which cylinder had pretty good compression
Bottom of the head showing the valves:
Here are the valves for cylinder 2 which had poor compression as did 3:
And here's Valves for 4 which had good compression:
I'm going to try and remove the cylinders tomorrow & to prepare, I squirted quite a bit of kroil along the rust surrounding & holding the stud in place in hopes it'll not give me too much resistance.
Any idea why those two studs rusted like they did & more, there does not seem to be enough rust on the shaft of the studs to account for the volume of rust that was in the shaft. Literally there were chunks or compressed rust I found 1/2" long & semicircular where they fell off when the head came off. All from that stud.
Amazing...
Thoughts on the above & anything looking off with the cylinder & valves?
Thanks!
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