Stan H
Well-Known Member
Mine is very similar with hose . Very old belong to my uncle Whitman (whitey) we called him..Burned valve will be very rare in these.
The causes have been all but eliminated. It used to be not uncommon in the days before positive valve seals, better guide tolerances (tighter guides) and greater oil consumption that was common in engines of the past.
You can also often tell by exhaust sound, and on a slowly idling engine, by using a dollar bill, or tissue, at the end of the tail pipe. A faulty exhaust valve - either by burning or by being held up by carbon, will allow reverse flow in the exhaust system and pull the tissue or dollar bill TOWARD the pipe every so often
Misfires on one bank caused by "something in common between the 3 cylinders) will still usually cause a 0300 because a sensor will impact all cylinders of that bank.
A code for a single cylinder will usually mean something specific to that cylinder, not something shared.
Here's your "compression tester". (mine is showing age at 50 years!)
There are so many means of diagnosing a misfire - I usually only use this to nail down other issues, like rings, piston issues and so on.
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