STAGE ONE "A"Today is compression Test day!
***Please note***
You are the final authority on any aspect of this project you chose to copy  I am giving voluntary advice.
 Refer to your manual or local mechanic for
 professional advice.
 I assume no liability for you following along.
Why do a compression test?
- Tells you a general story on the condition of your engine, if the compression is good and it
 has no bad habits you've got a good base to start with.
What is the test going to tell you? - The general condition of the cylinder and valve sealing
This is one of those places where getting
book  values is pretty rare...
Example...
The Haynes manual calls for 170psi minimum |removethispart|@ 400rpm
  My experience is that you have a hard time getting 400rpm off the starter and if you do how can you be sure if you don't have a tachometer? Plus every compression tester gives slightly different readings.
So what are you looking for?
On a
cold engine I find, generally, a good engine will read between 100-130 psi (stock)
On a
warm engine I find, generally, a good engine will read between 130-160 psi (stock)
  A little higher or a little lower is not a big deal, what you are looking for is that they are
EVEN......a difference of 10 psi is OK in my opinion, but dead even is what I like to see.
  You combine this information with the general running condition of the engine...
- Does it use any oil?
- Does it loose any coolant?
- Does it have any major leaks of coolant or oil?
- Does it make any rude or unusual clicking, knocking or craping sounds?
With Project RallyKick
- It doen't use any oil.
- It doesn't loose any coolant.
- It doesn't have any leaks of note.
- It has no noises that should not be there.
So as long as the compression is in the "Zone" and even I've got a good base!
Doing the test.......
Tools
- Spark Plug socket
- Short extension
- Rachet
- Decent compression tester, screw in style not the cheap type you hold in place

Lets do it...
- run engine to normal temp (you can do it cold but warm is preffered)
- open hood
- Carefully (don't burn yerself) remove plug wires and mark or layout so you don't mix them up

- Remove spark plugs (don't burn yerself, again)

 Now before you go any farther look at them, they should be a light brown and all the same.
 If not you need to figure out why?
 These are from RallyKick

- Insert compression tester, hand tight (snug)
- Spin over, I do a ten turn count
- Read the guage, write down the number
- Repeat for the next three cylinders
These are from RallyKick, I cheated and did it stone cold so the numbers are OK, notice they are close to identical indicating good cylinder sealing/valve sealing (120-120-115-120 Stone Cold)




I had already done a hot test before the engine was removed from the donor vehicle and the hot compression was 150 psi and all even when hot. (So cold was ok for the pics cause I already has a hot)
Now reinstall the spark plugs, hook up the wires and test run to be sure you didn't mess up.
You're done.......and I've confirmed that the
RallyKick base engine is in good shape.
Now if you find a cylinder way out of whack it indicates a mechanical problem you need to diagnose...bad rings, sticking valves, burnt valves....
Bad rings or valves can usually be diagnosed by putting a squirt of oil in the offending cylinder.
- If the compression jumps up the rings are in trouble
- If the compression doesn't change it's usually a valve problem
Etheir way no point in doing any more work till you fix the problem.
But for this project....I've got a good one.
Next the major tune up!
Zag