Earlier this week I got the bright idea that I could do a compression check on an engine; after all, I still had the compression gauge from my ’63 Chevy, and with my welder, I could build an adapter from and old sparkplug.
Wrong.
A few minutes GOOGLING turned up what the numbers ment and how they were derived via a ‘differential pressure check”. My search also pointed me to TCM’s SB03-03 which says in effect you must do a borescope inspection in conjunction with each compression check. Actually, at http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/188758-1.html
It says “If your shop doesn't have a borescope, it cannot legally perform a compression test on a TCM engine.”
Question: During your last annual, did you see a borescope in use?
Wrong.
A few minutes GOOGLING turned up what the numbers ment and how they were derived via a ‘differential pressure check”. My search also pointed me to TCM’s SB03-03 which says in effect you must do a borescope inspection in conjunction with each compression check. Actually, at http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/188758-1.html
It says “If your shop doesn't have a borescope, it cannot legally perform a compression test on a TCM engine.”
Question: During your last annual, did you see a borescope in use?
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