So you are telling me if my bike is registering 130# while cranking the engine it most likely needs a rebuild? Where can I obtain this info for my service tech?
If so, this thing is hitting the classifieds! :angry:
What you want to see is another angle of the cylinder's health. This is called a leak down test. It goes something like this:
1. I want air to push a gauge's needle to 100 on a scale. This represents something is open.
a. A bent valve or a tight valve, or a burnt valve, can move that scale to 100.
b. A leaking head gasket can move that scale to read a lower push of air at the gauge. It may be a pinhole leak. I may set the needle to 80, or a tiny leak. Not an open 100% leak, now call it.
c. A ring gap is you leak there and that is a loss of compression. This leak down is another angle as to view the health of these combined parts that all make up that one number, or the compression number.
2. Using the leak down tester has a whole different number percentage, and this is more we think of using the compression tester as a book's gauge. For example, book calls for a working range of 145 ~ 228 psi.
a. Notice how using a compression tester, 145 is the breakout number.
b. 145 is your 'serviceable limit' number. This says 144.9999999 psi is your breakout number.
c. I believe I have video of my compression numbers that read, in the 220 range. Therefore, I do not need a leak down tester. I am within book range. I have a high mileage bike with robust compression.
3. What I am suggesting to you is, buy the tool, buy the compressor. This tool setup is what you take to your classifies with. Before I come buying your bike, I don't need to know about your battery condition, fuel system. I more need to check a dead engine this way:
a. Find TDC (top dead center) on your potential buy. Stick it in top gear. Jam a long rod thru the wheel and sprocket. This jams the wheel from moving a valve from opening [in either direction].
b. Dial out the gauge to read 0%. This means the leak down is closed; no air is escaping. You set the connectors together, watch the needle's next move.
c. This is where an ideal number at a leak down is 1-2%. 1 is better, but still means, air loss at the ring gap. If we had the head off, filled the head with liquid, it should not leak. Therefore, the 1% drop is a perfect specimen.
d. If we saw 9% leak, this is tear down time. This is 100 psi time. This is watching the cylinders having a 10 to 15% pressure difference between cylinder psi's, using a compression test reading. It still means big bucks to return to 1% leak.
Again, if you do not have a spec book, cannot match breakout numbers in the shop man you will pay selling a high compression engine without reading a leak down first. Think you are upset now.

Quit guessing!
Harbor China Crap 38 bucks US.
Cylinder Leak-Down Tester