Let's run some numbers as I have nothing to do this morning.....it just rained on my "down" hay so I can't bale it .
Thinking about force applied, like with a torque wrench in ft-lbs. Force = pressure x area. Pressure (considering the valves are closed which as stated above may not be the case.....tough luck) is say 125 psi; best you can get from a single stage compressor.
For area let's take a single cylinder of a Ford and a Johnny Popper....guessing at the diameters but close enough to see where we are. Ford take 3". Popper take 7".
Area of the piston is 22/7....aka 3.14 x (ス the diameter x ス the diameter).
Ford: 3.14 x (3"/2 x 3"/2) = 3.14 x 2.25 = 7" surface area.
Force applied to piston is 125 psi x 7" area = 883 ft-lbs.......Yepper that's a sizeable force pushing down on that piston. No need to go to the popper but let's do it anyway.
Popper: 3.14 x (7"/2 x 7"/2) = 3.14 x 12.25 = 38.5" surface area.
125 psi x 38.5" area = 4810 ft-lbs. Yepper that really IS a sizeable force.
Add that to a long stroke for good torque and you see why John decided that a 2 jug, syrup bucket engine would be to a farmer's advantage when needing something to do some serious work.
Course what's missing from the above is the added whammy when the injector squirts a mist of diesel in the compressed air generated by the compression stroke.
So, compare that to you on your pipe wrench on the crank shaft trying to rock the engine back and forth after you soaked it good with some sort of release agent.
Yes sir. Compressed air is a tool. Course with a multi cylinder engine luck would have it that you could have at least one cylinder with the valves closed.