Last year, this engine (approx. 40k miles post-rebuild) began blowing an excessive amount of smoke out of the PCV system when the routing was slightly modified (manifold vacuum source removed). A compression test revealed 165 psi from #1-5, and 120 psi in #6. Obviously there was a problem. Car idled poorly at 14:1 afr, but aside from blowing oil out the air filter, ran OK under moderate boost levels. Also, each time the plugs were changed, the #3 plug was always blacker than the rest, without good reason. I should note that the engine did not consume coolant over a span of several years and multiple autocross events. There were, however, some "coolant pouring out the overflow" incidents way back, attributed at the time to poor burping.
Anyhow, disassembly of the engine immediately revealed the cause of the low compression on 6, a cracked ringland, which was suspected. FYI, pistons are OEM toyota, 0.020 overbore:
Sadly, close examination of the head revealed the cause of the odd spark plug color in #3. It also explained the odd cooling system behaviour observed ~12k miles ago. Strange that this cylinder gave good compression results given the crack. Looks like new head time.
For reference, here are pictures of the head and block. Lots of carbon from all the oil entering the engine. In #1, a champion spark plug lost its insulator - there was a surprising amount of damage to the head and piston from this. Not so strangely enough, every little oddity over the years showed itself when I tore the engine down.
Anyhow, disassembly of the engine immediately revealed the cause of the low compression on 6, a cracked ringland, which was suspected. FYI, pistons are OEM toyota, 0.020 overbore:
Sadly, close examination of the head revealed the cause of the odd spark plug color in #3. It also explained the odd cooling system behaviour observed ~12k miles ago. Strange that this cylinder gave good compression results given the crack. Looks like new head time.
For reference, here are pictures of the head and block. Lots of carbon from all the oil entering the engine. In #1, a champion spark plug lost its insulator - there was a surprising amount of damage to the head and piston from this. Not so strangely enough, every little oddity over the years showed itself when I tore the engine down.