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Brian :
Sorry to say this, but IMO you have busted rings (maybe even a busted
piston) in #6.  Which probably means the cylinder walls are shot, too.
The pressure test is a good idea, as there is a slight possibility it is
just a very badly burnt valve.
Driving it without #6 probably won't hurt anything (assuming there
aren't pieces of ring/piston in the oil), but the burnt valve in #1
might possibly ruin the seat (if it hasn't already).  If you are
planning on hardened seats anyway, it doesn't matter.
Randall
Brian Borgstede wrote:
> 
> Well,
> I pulled the plugs to see why the 250 had a miss.
> I hoped to see the first three plugs to be one color
> and the last three to be another.  Not so lucky.
> The first five plugs where a nice tan color, the
> #6 plug covered in oil.  Well, maybe the plug
> fouled and quit firing and built up oil over time.
> 
> The compression test...
> cold engine dry
> 90  150  170  140  160 and #6... Zero!
> 
> Wet (few squirts of oil in spark plug holes)
> 92  180  195  170  195 and #6... 7psi.
> 
> I figure that #1 has a leaky valve,
> I took the valve cover off to check #6 to see if the
> valves where closing.  The stems are going up and down
> as normal.
> My next step is to pump compressed air into the #6 hole
> and find it's escape, (water, oil, intake, gasket, or exhaust)
> 
> My plan was to drive the car for teh summer and start the
> restoration this winter.  I know that the head Has to come off,
> and the rings are worn.
> 
> Could I be missing something here?
> Can I just drive it for the summer?
> What kind of leak causes zero to 7psi. compression?
> 
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>           NEW E-MAIL ADDRESS:    borgstede@umsl.edu
> 
> Brian Borgstede                 I
> Telecommunications Engineer,                 I  '68 Triumph
> University of Missouri, St. Louis       I
> Instructional Technology Center I          TR-250
> Phone:  (314) 516-6433          I       (or 2 or more)
> Fax:  (314) 516-5294            I
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