RichardR
Member
- 96
- 3
- 8
- Location
- Austin, TX
LuckyDog,
A big THANK YOU to LuckyDog for the explanation of compression ratio and maximum measured cylinder pressure. It's been many years since I took a thermodynamics course and I never understood, until now, why the measured pressure wasn't simply atmospheric pressure * compression ratio. Makes perfect sense now!
But I have a question also. I seem to recall that some folks (and maybe you, too, LuckyDog) have had problems with MEP-002A's and -003A's that run for a couple of minutes and then die like a fuel supply problem, but accompanied by excessive exhaust smoke. Could this be caused by crankcase pressure building up due to blow by overwhelming the crankcase breather and causing it to spit oil directly into the intake manifold? Your post #16 seems to indicate that this would happen if the breather was hooked up normally. And I recall from somewhere a report that such a scenario even resulted in oil being puked out of the intake manifold into the air filter.
The reason I asked this question is that I just acquired a couple of MEP-003A's that have oil in the air filter housings -- something I have never seen before. I haven't started them up yet, but maybe I should look for excessive blow by in these machines? Or maybe some "helpful" technician just oiled the filter elements to make them work better, even though there is a label that says not to do that.
My advice on your cylinder #2 problem is the same as what derf said -- the piston and rings must be the source of the problem. You could probably fix it good as new by lightly honing the cylinder and replacing the piston. But it might be easier to replace the entire engine with one of the rebuilds frequently available on our favorite auction site. Less than $250 should get you a complete zero-time engine, and with a lot less work and uncertainty than trying to repair the one you have.
Good luck with your situation and thanks for the compression ratio lesson,
Richard
A big THANK YOU to LuckyDog for the explanation of compression ratio and maximum measured cylinder pressure. It's been many years since I took a thermodynamics course and I never understood, until now, why the measured pressure wasn't simply atmospheric pressure * compression ratio. Makes perfect sense now!
But I have a question also. I seem to recall that some folks (and maybe you, too, LuckyDog) have had problems with MEP-002A's and -003A's that run for a couple of minutes and then die like a fuel supply problem, but accompanied by excessive exhaust smoke. Could this be caused by crankcase pressure building up due to blow by overwhelming the crankcase breather and causing it to spit oil directly into the intake manifold? Your post #16 seems to indicate that this would happen if the breather was hooked up normally. And I recall from somewhere a report that such a scenario even resulted in oil being puked out of the intake manifold into the air filter.
The reason I asked this question is that I just acquired a couple of MEP-003A's that have oil in the air filter housings -- something I have never seen before. I haven't started them up yet, but maybe I should look for excessive blow by in these machines? Or maybe some "helpful" technician just oiled the filter elements to make them work better, even though there is a label that says not to do that.
My advice on your cylinder #2 problem is the same as what derf said -- the piston and rings must be the source of the problem. You could probably fix it good as new by lightly honing the cylinder and replacing the piston. But it might be easier to replace the entire engine with one of the rebuilds frequently available on our favorite auction site. Less than $250 should get you a complete zero-time engine, and with a lot less work and uncertainty than trying to repair the one you have.
Good luck with your situation and thanks for the compression ratio lesson,
Richard