It should not be under 100 psi and not over about 135psi for a stock 2-stroke.
6 cylinders
What's more important is that all the cylinders should be within 10% of each other.
Remove all the plugs and do a compression test on all cylinders. If compression is good then replace all plugs and plug wires one at a time. If you find one or more cylinders with low compression, suspect a burnt valve, or a possible blown head gasket, especially if you are loosing coolant. You may also have an injector that is malfunctioning. Start with the plugs and wires which probably need replacing anyway.
Wild Arctic was created in 1997.
14:1 compression
The 4.2 Liter is a V6 with 6 cylinders.
Alaska's Arctic Wildlife - 1997 TV was released on: USA: 15 April 1997
Moisture in the cylinders is a sign of a blown head gasket.
Line up the timing marks, install new chain and gears, then do a compression test. If you have some cylinders with no compression, the push rods and maybe some valves are bent. There may be some piston damage done also. Good luck.
The cast of Arctic Journeys - 1997 includes: Boyd Matson as Narrator Mike Pengra as Narrator
You've realigned the marks, but did you check which piston stroke? The marks will align in two instances, top dead center on the compression stroke, and top dead center of the exhaust stroke. I'd bet money that you've aligned the timing marks to TDC exhaust stroke. That would explain 0 compression in all cylinders. Rotate your crank shaft by itself (leave the camshaft where it is) 360 degrees (one full turn) and you should then by aligned to TDC compression stroke, as it is supposed to be.
The arctic cat thindercat came out in 1997, I think.