With luck, poor valve(s). Can also be poor piston rings, a busted head gasket or a cracked head.
The usual cause of cooling system pressure surges is a bad head gasket. The compression from the cylinders gets into the cooling system and raises the pressure. Have a mechanic run a compression test to see if there are any big pressure changes between the cylinders.
Compression can cause loss of data or information, reduced quality of the compressed file, and potential compatibility issues with certain devices or software. It can also make it harder to edit or modify the compressed file.
Hemicord compression refers to the compression of one half (hemi-) of the spinal cord. This compression can cause neurological symptoms like weakness, numbness, and pain on one side of the body corresponding to the affected half of the spinal cord. Treatment often involves surgical decompression to relieve pressure on the spinal cord.
If your car seems to be losing power, you should check the compression of the engine.A patient who has received severe burns may require a compression bandage while he heals.Osteoporosis may cause compression fractures as the bones weaken and become more fragile.The forces of tension and compression work together to make bridges strong enough to hold considerable weight.
Tension forces pull materials apart, while compression forces push them together. Tension can cause stretching and weakening, while compression can cause crushing and buckling. Both forces can affect the structural integrity of a material by causing deformation or failure if the material cannot withstand the applied forces.
No compression on all cylinders would indicate a broken cam belt. i think this motor has hydralic lifter, but for them to cause no compression it would be unlikly. when you say no do you mean none at all or low compression? a broken cam belt could be the cause if all cylinders have no compression. if the cylinders are down it could be bad valve seats (the point of contact between the valve and the head). if it is one or two cylinders it could be cracked head or cracked/broken head gasket. the only other possablilities are broken rings or broken piston. you need to know compression reading of all cylinders in a dry and wet situation. to do this 1:take the compesssion of a cylinder 2:then remove compression guage and squirt two good squirts of engine oil in the cylinder through the plug hole. 3:retake comperssion reading of cylinder. if the compression reading increases you have bad rings, if it doesnt the rings are fine. hope that helped and not confused you Geoff
Blown head gasket is one cause.
No compression on all cylinders, assuming pistons are moving and valves are intact - would imply bad valve timing, most likely timing chain... Several other issues can cause low compression in misc cylinders but no compression across the board without a catastrophic event such as major overheat or fuel washing cylinders, blown crank, etc - but "no compression" again, first check would be timing chain.
AGE ! if it is low compression and not no compression then your piston rings and valves are worn too much and the engine probably needs to be rebuilt.
If you have low compression on one or more cylinders then you will need to pen the engine up to find the cause. It can be either a blown head gasket, burnt valve, or worn piston rings.
This sounds like your head gasket has blownbetween cylinders 2 & 3.this will cause a compression loss on the affected cylinders.you need to have a compression test carried out on your engine.AnotherIf you're CERTAIN that the spark is good and it's timed properly, next I'd check the compression in those two cylinders. It's suspicious to me that the two non-functional cylinders are adjacent. If the engine has overheated any time in the last year you have probably warped the head. A simple compression test will tell the story.
Low compression will not cause an engine to not run. It may not run efficiently but it will run. Low compression on all cylinders is caused by wear, and can only be fixed by overhauling the engine. Low compression on just one cylinder can be a blown head gasket, burnt valve, or a broken ring on that cylinder. I also depends on what you mean by "below average". An engine with lots of miles may very well have a compression reading that is below the factory specifications and not be cause for alarm. It depends on how much below specs that compression is. In any case, the only fix is to open the engine up.
Check the compression for the cylinders on the Eclipse. If there is?æa leak in one of the cylinders then this could cause the jerking.
A 4.3L V6 engine may exhibit symptoms of running on only four cylinders due to issues such as a faulty spark plug, ignition coil, or fuel injector that can cause misfiring or poor combustion. Additionally, vacuum leaks, low compression in one or more cylinders, or problems with the engine's fuel delivery system can also contribute to this issue. Diagnosing the exact cause typically involves checking the ignition and fuel systems, as well as performing a compression test on the cylinders.
do you seriously think that theres a hole in the piston in all the cylinders? or the rings are gone in all the cylinders.. highly unlikely.. the main cause of loss of compression is the rings are burnt gone. the rings are stuck, the valves are stuck, hole in the piston and/or head, bent valves, or the timing chain/belt came off, or broke. with all the cylinders being down, i'd look into the last one. that's the only thing that would be logical to effect all the cylinders evenly.
The fuel is ignited by compression and not by a spark plug. The compression of the cylinders is much higher than in a gas engine. The fuel must be compressed to the point at which it will ignite. This cause the noise you hear from a diesel engine.
On one or all cylinders? a single cylinder compression loss may be a stuck or bent valve, or even bad piston rings. Engine wide would have to be some kind of massive valve train failure.