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...because there is no sign of it in the head, or inside cyl. 4 / the exhaust manifold. The turbo is spinning great and there is no play in the spindle. You would imagine the flap getting stud behind the inlet-valves, right down the inlet-port, but there is just no sign of it. I got the inlet valves down using a home-made valve-spring compressor, built from a piece of angle-iron and an M10 nut/bolt and sent pipe cleaners through. There is no obstruction in the head at all. Ima
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Slight marking on piston 4 suggest the flap has been mashed through the cylinder, or that the inlet-valves have gingerly contacted the piston while that was going on.
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In the block, cylinders 1-3 appear to be working perfectly. All cylinders are in the right position and the engine was running [badly] so there is no seizing. Cylinder 4 appears to be firing correctly, despite the marking to piston-top. Cylinder 5 appears to be firing ok, but there was a small pool of neat diesel in it. This may have just spilled over from cyl. 6 when the head was removed, as 5 appears to be firing.
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Cylinder 6 was full of neat diesel to the brim. There was no sign of 'hydro-locking' or the neat fuel affecting the crank, so it seems to have been gushing straight into the turbo/exhaust. Exhaust-port 6 on the head is wet / oily with diesel, whereas the other 5 are bone dry and sooty, so it looks like only cyl. 6 was in fact not firing.
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The top of piston 6 is quite badly corroded, as is the top of the combustion chamber in the head around the valves. I wonder if excessive fuel from a leaking injector could cause this?
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Injector 6 appears fine [as is always the case].
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There is no sign of damage to the head, cams, block, manifold and turbo, so I have to give the head a clean bill of health and will be putting it back on. New gasket is £80-£120 on its own!
No loss of compression on cyl. 6 or damage to head-gasket.
My best guess is that as exh. port 6 on the head is wet with fuel, no. 6 injector has flopped it in a big way and been flooding the back cylinder with fuel and not firing, which could still explain the sudden nature of the fault.
If this not the case, then I can only imagine the dropping swirl-flap has caused untold damage to the engine, knocked the timing out somehow affecting only cyl. 6 completely, but 4 and 5 to fire improperly too.
Yeah, so looking like a truly broken injector then! Guess I will be replacing all 6 when I refit, about £40 each, along with some swirl-flap blanking-plates for £7.50. I also broke the thermostat-housing as I removed the feed-hose, so that's another £40 down the drain, oh and more oil and coolant of course. Think I'll re-use the head-bolts!
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