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brand new factory engine - compression numbers

Old May 5, 2020 | 11:01 AM
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brand new factory engine - compression numbers

Since I haven't found anything like that on the forum yet and maybe somebody is interested here are compression numbers of a brand new Japan factory engine N3H3-02-200 (no US-reman!).
Numbers are normalised to sea level 250 rpm, average of 3 tests per rotor on a cold engine after fitted into the car:

Front: 145,15 149,48 152,62 PSI
Rear: 122,87 128,51 131,73

Pretty high on the front, but I like it :-D
Will post new numbers after 600 miles.
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Old May 5, 2020 | 12:05 PM
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there are several issues, likely because warm engine numbers are required for an accurate assessment

rather than get into all that, you may want to rerun the test under the correct condition to help provide an accurate assessment later

or not, your choice
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Old May 11, 2020 | 09:25 AM
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Unlike piston engines, Rotary engines are tight when are cold hence higher compression number.
As they warm up they become loose since thermal expansion is always outward.
Sorry to say numbers are no valid and must do other test when engine baked hot.
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Old May 13, 2020 | 09:49 AM
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So here are the numbers for the hot engine with now 70 miles on the clock:
Front: 126,18 128,73 127,97 PSI
Rear: 109,76 118,28 117,13
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Old May 13, 2020 | 09:55 AM
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Originally Posted by w_hari
So here are the numbers for the hot engine with now 70 miles on the clock:
Front: 126,18 128,73 127,97 PSI
Rear: 109,76 118,28 117,13
Excellent may I ask how much cost you ?
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Old May 13, 2020 | 12:29 PM
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That's not too bad but that's quite the delta between the front and rear rotor.

Factory spec says that the front and rear shouldn't have more than 14.5 PSI difference. Taking the mean average of your front and rear numbers, I got a 12.6 PSI delta between rotors. So it meets the specs but it's pretty close to the edge.
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Old May 14, 2020 | 01:55 AM
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yeah, it was way worse in the first test

It’s not excellent, but ok. Those differences cause a dynamic imbalance under load. That’s why the limits exist. The problem in general is they don’t hand fit the side seals to exacting end clearance tolerances like a pro race engine builder would. They just use the pre-cut seals based on the letter classification system in the factory rebuild manual.
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Old May 15, 2020 | 02:03 AM
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Originally Posted by Heisen Delgosha
Excellent may I ask how much cost you ?
Engine was about 3.900 GBP
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Old May 17, 2020 | 06:32 AM
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Originally Posted by TeamRX8
yeah, it was way worse in the first test

It’s not excellent, but ok. Those differences cause a dynamic imbalance under load. That’s why the limits exist. The problem in general is they don’t hand fit the side seals to exacting end clearance tolerances like a pro race engine builder would. They just use the pre-cut seals based on the letter classification system in the factory rebuild manual.
Excellent for being above 8.0 all factory engines were built by pre-cuted side seals. tolerance is range of turbo piston ring.
I have seen lots of "pro race engine builder " failed to get 8.5 after overhaul even those they had "street port" which could influenced static/ dynamic compression number.
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Old May 17, 2020 | 11:05 AM
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Actually, now that I think of it, maybe 70 miles is too early?

Technically you can still be breaking in. Maybe at 1000 miles you could have better numbers?
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Old May 17, 2020 | 12:15 PM
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Originally Posted by UnknownJinX
Actually, now that I think of it, maybe 70 miles is too early?

Technically you can still be breaking in. Maybe at 1000 miles you could have better numbers?

Definitely still breaking in. Will probably be a good engine for you. That F/R balance should come into line.
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Old May 17, 2020 | 03:12 PM
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well there are many opinions on that, mine is that anything over 600 miles (as stated in the owner manual) is just depriving yourself, but ok

it’s more for bearings, rotor gears, and such than for compression sealing. This is pretty much the accepted way to break in a rotary race engine, which you think if anything they’d be more concerned about it than for a street engine


On road or dyno after warm up with new bearings:
RPM MILES
5000 60
6000 60
7000 60
8000 60
8500 60

On road or dyno after warm up with old bearings:
RPM MILES
6000 25
7000 25
8000 25
8500 25
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Old May 18, 2020 | 12:03 AM
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Originally Posted by TeamRX8
well there are many opinions on that, mine is that anything over 600 miles (as stated in the owner manual) is just depriving yourself, but ok

it’s more for bearings, rotor gears, and such than for compression sealing. This is pretty much the accepted way to break in a rotary race engine, which you think if anything they’d be more concerned about it than for a street engine


On road or dyno after warm up with new bearings:
RPM MILES
5000 60
6000 60
7000 60
8000 60
8500 60

On road or dyno after warm up with old bearings:
RPM MILES
6000 25
7000 25
8000 25
8500 25

Is that info from Mr.D?
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Old May 18, 2020 | 06:38 PM
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Mazda Motorsports is where I originally saw it 25+ years ago, still applies to this day ...
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Old May 19, 2020 | 09:35 PM
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Originally Posted by TeamRX8
Mazda Motorsports is where I originally saw it 25+ years ago, still applies to this day ...
thanks.

I prefer faster break-in. When I rebuilt 4 stroke piston engines, I would assemble the piston skirts, rings, and cylinders dry, (everything else was oiled) and would freak people out, including the other mechanics.

Those engines always showed signs of excellent break-in. Low oil consumption, good power, excellent compression within the first couple of starts.No callbacks ever, even on commercial tractor engines that would run hard from the day they left the shop. I have done it since to all my own engines.

i felt 2 strokes were a different story, though. Those seem to like some "seed oil".
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Old Jul 25, 2020 | 10:46 AM
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UPDATE: So here are the numbers for the engine with now 735 miles on the clock:
Front: 125,11 129,48 126,94 PSI

Rear: 116,57 122,06 120,60

Interestingly, not much did happen on the front rotor, but rear rotor is now more what one could expect for a new engine. Starting to go over 4500 rpm now.
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Old Jul 29, 2020 | 09:32 PM
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Originally Posted by w_hari
Front: 125,11 129,48 126,94 PSI
Rear: 116,57 122,06 120,60
Pardon my ignorance but what is the second number showing here? The 11,48,94 and so on? The 125, 129, and 126 look like PSI but what are the others? Are these numbers just not rounded or something?
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Old Jul 29, 2020 | 10:27 PM
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The comma means decimal in many european countries. Those are just decimals.
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Old Oct 15, 2021 | 04:07 AM
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2nd UPDATE: here are the numbers for the engine with 3580 miles on the clock:
Front: 120.78 121.08 115.88 PSI

Rear: 117.67 121.98 122.33

The high numbers on the front rotor have come down to normal levels now, while the rear rotor has stabilized.
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Old Nov 3, 2021 | 09:16 PM
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Originally Posted by kevink0000
thanks.

I prefer faster break-in. When I rebuilt 4 stroke piston engines, I would assemble the piston skirts, rings, and cylinders dry, (everything else was oiled) and would freak people out, including the other mechanics.

Those engines always showed signs of excellent break-in. Low oil consumption, good power, excellent compression within the first couple of starts.No callbacks ever, even on commercial tractor engines that would run hard from the day they left the shop. I have done it since to all my own engines.

i felt 2 strokes were a different story, though. Those seem to like some "seed oil".
One of my friends use to do break-in with WOT on the road. All of his cars were better in comparison with others.
Note that those areas would receive oil few seconds or under a min from other parts ( oil jet or leaks from connecting rod bearings)
Problem with engines which run unloaded aka idle a lot is mirroring of the cylinder wall, there is interesting design about Engine with rotating cylinder wall

Back to rotaries, they are different animals. apex seals only drag along the housing, unlike piston rings which have rotational movement too.
IMO the major problem is the material of the housing which is aluminum and it has much more heat expansion in comparison with rotors, hence increasing in clearance and compression reduction whereas in piston engines the piston will expand and reduce clearance. ( there is an exception on a few engines which has silic-alu block aka non-steel liner engine)
Another issue is the rotors as they are cast. Forge material has a higher thermal expansion rate, the same reason forge pistons need more clearance...
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Old May 24, 2023 | 04:59 AM
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3nd UPDATE:
6360 miles
Front: 120.62 121.65 117.52 PSI
Rear: 110.08 116.50 118.91

13000 miles
Front: 113.01 117.21 110.91 PSI
Rear: 107.05 110.57 110.94

Started premixing after 6000 miles, so wondering about the benefit since numbers have come down significantly after that.
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Old Apr 30, 2026 | 07:20 AM
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Been a while but still checking compression about 2 times a year.

4th UPDATE:
16000 miles
Front: 117.43 117.09 113.27 PSI
Rear: 107.76 116.32 115.29

24000 miles

Front: 109.77 115.06 109.06 PSI
Rear: 108.81 117.18 109.85

29000 miles

Front: 114.76 112.58 109.33 PSI
Rear: 109.85 116.72 105.87
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