We had a YM336D. Best tractor I ever owned...bar none. Remarkably powerful and handy. Might be the best 30 to 40 hp tractor period with the powershift, PS, fancy loader, draft, and optional creeper gearing. If I could buy a new one today I would just to have it.
But it sounds to me like your measurements are being done correctly . If not, run them again. The numbers you are getting are simply too low to provide good combusion of the diesel fuel so you are getting incomplete combustion blown out the exhaust. Maybe sitting caused the rings to be stuck and that is the cause, but also likely is a leaking head gasket or leaky valves. Again, your measured compression method sounds good, but the compression is showing something wrong - something that would lead to exactly the wet stacking you are seeing. Your compression test should be reading in the 400 to 600 psi range depending on the cranking RPM. Most starters will crank somewhere from from 100 to 300 RPM.
Yes, 21:1 is correct, and yes, the JD 1050 with its turbo did run a little lower C.R. .... more in the range of 20:1. That is not enough to make a difference. Your bafflement at the disparity between calculated compression ratio and what you should be measuring is
because compression ratio is more than just the ratio of the swept volume.
Swept volume is about half of it. The other half of the pressure you will measure comes from the expansion heating of the air that is being compressed. That expansion of heated air due to compression heating at cranking RPM is where your error is.
BTW, just to be a technical geek, when you are calculating the part of compression that is due to the change in swept volume there is also a volume of the combustion chamber volume that is not swept and doesn't change. BUT THAT DOESN'T MEAN IT CAN BE IGNORED IN THE COMPRESSION CALCULATION. You can prove this to yourself if you calculate your swept volume compression ratio and while adding a compression chamber volume to both sides of the ratio. The combustion area didn't change, but the compression ratio will. Nifty... hot rodder stuff.....
Getting a number for that static part of the volume up there in the head where the explosion takes place isn't easy. On diesels like the YM336 with it's indirect injection type of head geometry it is even more of a problem....being really a ***** to measure. The good news is it doesn't matter for what you are doing. If you really want to measure the combustion chamber volume, hot rodders measure using fluid when the head is off and inverted.
Just for completeness, you probably should check the thermostart mechanism on the intake manifold like "nyone" says. There were two forms of thermostart depending on whether the fuel bowl is fed by pressure from the injectors (and then to the tank) or whether the fuel bowl is just filled by the operator once every few years manually. Both have a snap open top. Whichever it is, either dry it out and/or bypass it to make sure it isn't the culprit.
Oh, here's a sheet that Yanmar put out for all their engines back when those tractors were being sold in the US. It's good info.
rScotty
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