There is a remote starter connection on the car, depending upon year model it will either be on the front of the the DLC (data link connector or the "blink box")connector over by the washer reservoir (early model) or on the later ones it will be in the fuse/relay box by the left strut tower. It is a single spade connector, hook a jumper wire to one end and your remote starter to the other, hit the button and it cranks. So long as the key is off you will not have to worry about the ignition or injection running. Like Chopper said you will want to have the throttle locked open so the engine can breathe and is not sucking against a closed throttle plate. When you crank it around make sure you are consistent, if you look up the specifics on compression testing you will find that often times it is recommended that you crank each piston 4 revs and note your number. I have seen plenty of people who crank them until the guage stops as well. Remember, when that engine is running it does not get 4-7 attempts to bring that compression all the way up before it fires it off, so take a look at those numbers as you are cranking and don't be afraid to do it a couple of ways while you are in there. Often times I will do just that, crank it 4 revs, note the number, realease the pressure, and then crank it 6-7 times or until the guage quits rising and note that number as well. If your numbers come out OK or maybe a little inconclusive I would consider doing a cylinder leak down test on it. I don't know if you are familiar with it or not but it is a tool similar to the compression tester. You screw a hose into the spark plug port when the piston is at TDC compression and then you pressurize the cylinder. The tool has two guages on it, one to show inlet pressure and one to show what the actaul pressure in the chamber is. So if you have 100 PSI going in and the actual pressure in the chamber is 75PSI then you are loosing 25% of what you are putting in there, not good. I forget that exact specs off the top of my head but anything under a 10% loss should be OK. Now if you are leaking a bunch you have to figure out where it is going, passed the rings and into the crankcase, passed an open valve and into the intake manifold? This where it gets a little gray as you are listening for the sound of escaping air and typically it will sound like there is a little coming from everywhere i.e. dipstick tube, oil fill cap, throttle body etc. Oh yeah, the easiest way to find TDC COMPRESSION stroke is with a whistle screwed into the spark plug hole (yeah, they make such a tool). It will whistle when you are coming up onto compression and not when you are coming up onto exhaust.
Edited by Rule 308, 27 April 2004 - 09:05 AM.