1986 Suzuki DT40 Compression

iblly

Cadet
Joined
Aug 4, 2009
Messages
8
Could anyone tell me what the compression should be on my 86 DT40. Both cylinders are 120 psi. Just want to know what they should be, is 120 on the low side ? Thanks for any replies !
 

JB

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
Mar 25, 2001
Messages
45,907
Re: 1986 Suzuki DT40 Compression

It should be 120 on your engine tested with your guage under your conditions using your technique.

Change any of those and the numbers probably change. As long as they both are within 10% it is good.
 

iblly

Cadet
Joined
Aug 4, 2009
Messages
8
Re: 1986 Suzuki DT40 Compression

It should be 120 on your engine tested with your guage under your conditions using your technique.

Change any of those and the numbers probably change. As long as they both are within 10% it is good.

Thanks for the reply, but I don't understand what your saying ? Obviously if I wasn't testing my engine with my gauge under my conditions using my technique the numbers would be different. I just want to know if 120 psi is considered low compression for that engine or not ? And what would the compression be on that engine if it were new ?
Thanks again for the reply.
 

david_r

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Aug 11, 2008
Messages
1,118
Re: 1986 Suzuki DT40 Compression

did you warm up the eng before you tested?..... did you put any oil into the cyls before you tested?........ did you remove all the plugs so the eng could trun freely?....did you try any other comp gauges?...... those are some of the variations and question that could be asked if you had low or drastically different comp #s............ you dont really have to answer those questions it was just an example........ i believe thats what jb was meaning when he said " tested with your gauge under your conditions and using your technique"


you will find most comp gauges will not read the same on the same eng....... even the more expensive ones arent as accurate as we would all hope.....

your comp needs to be within 10% of each other for it to perform correctly: if you have 100 on one and 80 on another that would be a 20% difference and you would have performance issues.

being at 120 you could have as much as 12-15# difference before you really have performance problems.

im sorry i dont know what the factory specs are on your eng... but 120 sounds good and strong.... maybe well kept or low hours.


i hope that cleared it up a little.
 
Top