Background
2003 XC70 w/ 116K miles
I bought the car a year ago and almost immediately had the timing belt changed by my father
Drove the car for 6000 miles or so essentially trouble free. No oil burning, smoke, or coolant burning.
Two months or so ago, the car threw a cam sensor code. Was running smoothly so I (incorrectly) assumed that I had a faulty sensor
Changed sensor, cleared code and drove for a week without problems or new codes.
I did have to add a small amount of coolant around this time. That's the only time I ever had to add coolant. I think it's unrelated, but....
Wife drove the car - check engine, loud, no power.... dead
Car was towed to mechanic who said that the timing was way off and that he couldn't get compression. His advice was to junk it.
I do not know why the timing slipped. The mechanic said that the crank bolt was missing. This is odd because my father said that he didn't remove the crank pulley, he removed the lower bracket and slipped the belt through the gap.
My suspicion is that the tensioner bolt loosened over time as I found anti-seize on the threads.
I had been wanting to try to rebuild an engine so I had the car towed to my house and I pulled off the head.
It was evident from the top of the cylinders that the exhaust valves had been hit but not obvious from the valves themselves. The headgasket was fine.
I cleaned the head, removed the valves and seals, and could tell that roughly half of the exhaust valves were bent.
I ordered a head gasket kit, all new osvat exhaust valves, new valve seals, cam locking tool etc. I did not send the head to a machine shop.
I lapped the exhaust and intake valves, replaced the seals, cleaned the top of the pistons w WD40, cleaned the PCV system and replaced hoses fittings as needed, and began reassembly.
The crank seemed to spin fine and the timing mark on the crank corresponded to just a tooth or two shy of top dead center on cylinder one.
As I mentioned, I bought the cam locking tool so I wasn't worried about timing the cams. With the cams locked, and the VVT gears rotated clockwise to limit, the timing marks on the cam lined up with the cam cover. (I never removed or loosened the VVT hubs)
Timing set, cam locks unbolted, I had no problems rotating the engine clockwise via the crank bolt.
Here's the prolem... the car will not start. It cranks but will not start.
I thought it was spark... We checked all the plugs and they are firing. Oddly, the plugs were not getting wet.
So it must be the injectors. Node tested the injector wires and they were firing. fuel rail was pressurized and gas would release from the shrader valve. We eased the right side of injectors out of the intake and turned the car over and we could see the gas.
Checked compression. ONLY 60-65 PSI IN EACH CYLINDER!!!! (Compression test gauge, all plugs removed, max throttle and rougly 8 spins of the motor)
It will wet test higher... some over 100 PSI if tested wet.
But why would ALL of the rings have gone bad when the car had been running fine before timing slipped!?!?!?
I injected about 20 PSI of compressed air into all of the cylinders (with each cylinder as close to TDC as I could estimate via a zip tie through the spark plug hole) and it really only seemed to be escaping from the dipstick, the PCV breather hose and nipple, and oil fill.
i could not feel air coming out the tail pipe or through the vacuum connection on the intake.
More to consider....
I asked my mechanic what he thought and he thinks it's likely that the pistons/rings are fine and that I still have a timing or valve train issue. He thinks I should pull the head off and take it to a machine shop. I don't know how this would jive with my crude leak test.
My father is suspicious of the copper coat that I put on the head gasket. I will note that I didn't see any bubbling in the coolant tank and it would seem to be a stretch for the air to escape through the head gasket and find away into the crankcase or cam cover without bubbling the coolant.
I am wondering if I have the crank off by one turn. I don't see how this could be an issue but I read another thread on here about a lack of compression after a timing belt change and the OP resolved his issue when he remembered that he only "turned the crank one turn instead of two".
Any help would be appreciated!
Adam






