Re: Low compression
Try re-torquing the head & the decarb first. If it stays low, I'd pull the head (easy on those V4s) and take a closer look. <br /><br />It it's a broken ring (if the ring is in chunks) or ring land - that it may self-destruct fast. The piston may break up further, or if the ring is broken up into pieces, the pieces may hang in a port. <br /><br />If it's just a scored wall, and the ring, piston land and piston top look intact, it could run that way for quite some time; particularly if you get the rings well freed-up with the decarb. <br /><br />Amongst other motors, I have a 1979 Johnson 100hp V4 that runs 125/125/95/88 for compression. It's been that way for a long time now, & last time I ran it, it would still push a light 16-footer to 44 mph. What happened was the motor got carboned up & the rings stuck. The compression for the for cylinders varied up & down over a few years, but now the situation is permanent. (Former owner was a airfreight pilot & kept a complete logbook on the boat.) The walls are moderately scored. I can't sell the motor that way, so I has stayed around as 'backup'. <br /><br />Obviously, don't go to sea, or otherwise rely for your safely on such a motor. But if you just need something to ski/fish small lakes or harbors, it may be an economical engine for some time to come.