Homemade compression tester

Tom S

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I figured I'd give this a more detailed shot.

These tools are a necessity for testing compression on the 7.3L Powerstroke diesel. The reasoning for that is there is insufficient clearance between the rocker arm for the angle that the glow plug port goes in for a standard straight adapter to work. It will hit the rocker arm. No fun.

The nice thing about this particular setup is that it can be used on ALL 8 cylinders. You have to mess with the hose a bit on the back cylinders, and you have to noodle past the A/C Compressor for cylinder #1, but it will fit. At least it did on my 99.5 Super Duty.

As a bonus! I've seen a few people on here have TDI's- The 7.3L Powerstroke and the early TDI's (1Z, AHU, and ALH engines) have the same glow plug thread pitch- This tool can ease getting a reading as you don't have to snake the compression tool down amongst the injection lines. Bonus!

Your starting goodies-
An economy diesel compression tester. I know for a fact that the Harbor Freight tool #93644 ( 12 Piece Diesel Engine Compression Tester ) has the 1/8" NPT adapter we will need. So I recommend it.

You'll need a 1/8" NPT female-to-female connector (I call them barrels)
You can get the just about anywhere that has a brass fitting selection. I got mine from Parker Store as it was easier to get it at the same time as our next piece.

You'll need an adapter to fit the actual glow plug port. Parker Store part #M10-1/8F8OHGS accomplishes this. It is our glow plug port thread pitch, M10-1.0, in an O-Ring boss male fitting on one side, but on the other adapts to 1/8"NPT female threads.

You can see if there is a Parker Store near you by searching at McCoy Sales Corporation - Manufacturers Representative and Distributor

If not, here is an internet alternative- ( M10-1/8F8OHGS MROstop.com )

You will need a grease gun hose whip. Not the kind with a fitted grease fitting on one end, but the kind with 1/8"NPT male fittings on both ends. I got mine from Ace, but noone seems to have the 12" whips online.
You can get them pretty much any auto supply store. Autozone should sell a 12" whip for about $4.99. I think I paid $6 at Ace. Either way, it doesn't matter.

You will also either need pipe dope or teflon tape. I won't link that as it should be obvious to anyone who got this far in the writeup.

At this point, lets see....
I paid roughly-
$30 for the compression tester.
$6 for the grease whip.
$1.50 for the barrel adapter
$12 for the M10-1.0 to 1/8" NPT adapter
And I have a healthy supply of teflon tape on hand.

So, thats roughly $50 into this venture, about $20 into the adapter. Beats the price of just the adapter from Snap-On.


So here we go with the visuals!

Here's what you need, plus an already assembled whip!
comptest-1.jpg


A closer look of whats required to make the whip-
comptest-4.jpg


And a close-up of the kicker part of the setup- the M10-1.0 O-Ring Boss to 1/8"NPT female adapter-
compfitting.jpg


So. What you will need to do is either pipe-dope or teflon tape both ends of the grease gun whip. If you use the tape, make sure when you put it on the threads you wind it such that when you go to put on the adapters they will spin in the same direction the tape was wound. If you do it the wrong way, it tends to bunch up and not be too effective.
Once you've teflon taped up the grease whip, attach your 1/8" NPT barrel connector to one end of the whip, and the O-Ring boss adapter onto the other. Make sure you are snug, but don't go crazy. We don't want to damage threads. But also remember, your new compression fitting must withstand upwards off 500PSI. Thus the grease whip as they are usually rated with a working pressure rating of 3000-5000PSI.

Believe it or not, thats as simple as it is! You now have a compression adapter whip ready to accept the 1/8"NPT adapter for your diesel compression testing kit!

A view of the adapter side-
comptest-5.jpg


And here is a view of the barrel side, with the 1/8"NPT compression adapter threaded in-
comptest-6.jpg



And for those of you who want to be sure I typed out the adapter part number correctly, a view of my invoice-
comptest-2.jpg



Now, to let you know. When performing a compression test on a stock 7.3L, there are no "official" ratings. Ford and International go by a blowby rating, measured with specialized tool and orifice adapters that are hard to come by. One must remember to maintain cranking speed throughout the test. Hooking up a battery charger helps a lot.
While there is no "official" rating, its generally accepted that 350 is the lowest end of healthy. Much below that and you might have some wear concerns.
The big thing to look out for in consistency. I don't like to see more than a 15% difference between the lowest cylinder and the highest. Some say 25%.


But bear in mind altitude also has a pretty drastic effect that can be calculated using these numbers (Thanks Tom S!)
1,000 feet = .9711,
2,000 feet = .9428,
3,000 feet = .9151,
4,000 feet = .8881,
5,000 feet = .8617,
6,000 feet = .8359,
7,000 feet = .8106,
8,000 feet = .7860

SO! If we have a reading of 302PSI at 6000 feet, that 302 is only 0.8359 of what it would be at sea level. Calculated out,
Solve for x.
0.8359x=302
Divide both sides by 0.8359.
302/0.8359= (.8359x)/.8359
361.29=x


Hope this helps!

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