courier
+1y
Gidday, yes well done on doing those compression tests, they agree with your photo; the #3 cylinder is stuffed and has big droplet of water sitting in it. So it may have done its head gasket? or the head is warped somehow? Will be interesting to hear what the machine shop guys say.
To answer your above question, i'd be tempted to remove the water pump for inspection. Heard (generally speaking) that some engines can get cracks or holes in the water pump housing which leak into the oil system. This could cause a leak from the timing chain area into the lower end? i'm not familiar with these engines at all however. I'd say if the chain was lashing it would make one hell of a noise, that you'd know all about, and the engine wouldnt run for too much longer. Also wouldnt you remove the pan for cleaning, to get all the residue from the water out?
And generally, what caused the damage to the engine initially? did it overheat? how badly? you'll need to find out why it happened eg leaking water pump, leaking hoses etc etc. I wrote off a nice FE3N engine few years ago, had a leaking radiator hose, at idle it was fine, it only leaked at above 2000rpm. Head gasket blew and bad cracks in the head, totally cooked so no hope of saving it. I was advised that when you overheat badly the alloy head will be annealed (ie softened) as aluminium is a soft metal, in the factory they heat treat it to make it strong enough to work in an engine. Potentially you can put an engine back together, then have issues down the track as the head has gone a bit soft. In my case i got another complete engine from the dismantlers, put it in, kept the blown one for spares. Also badly overheated can damage rings and do strange things to the block people told me.
will be good to hear how it all works out!