Jay, since this happened suddenly, I think you'll find a holed or cracked piston in the cylinder with no compression. It could have dropped a valve too. The 35# cylinder may have a burnt or stuck open valve. Was he running this thing hard when it happened? Might not have been -- a valve keeper could have just given up, or some other condition (like plain old metal fatigue, or a factory flaw finally showing up) caused the problem. You definitely need to pull the head on the side with the dead cylinder. Check the valves when the cover is off (make sure both are there), but don't turn it over again. Pull the head and check the piston first. Could be cracked and scratching the cylinder wall. I know you've spun it some already, but one more time could scratch that much deeper. Even if the wall is scratched deep you can have that cylinder sleeved and bored to match the rest. Sleeving costs about $50 a hole now. If more than three cylinders need sleeving I'd look for another block. I generally go with more than two on a six, but that's just my opinion. If it's a hard to find block (like a 401) you might want to sleeve all eight. Would depend on the price of a replacement block. I do know a few people who have had all cylinders in a 390 or 401 sleeved. 360s can generally be found easy enough that more than two or three sleeves aren't practical. You just have to figure what your time to retrieve and disassemble the "new" engine is worth, and the wait if you can't get one immediately. How long can you be without the car? The good 304 may have nearly as much power as the tired 360, but if you're going to rebuild the 360 and can wait 2-4 weeks there's no point in pulling the engine twice. _______________________________________________ AMC-List mailing list AMC-List@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list or go to http://www.amc-list.com