I've got a '79 W200 that was used as a Brush Fire Truck before I got it. Originally it had a 318, but a 360 crate motor was swapped in by the fire department. The body only has 30,000 miles and the 360 engine, less than 10,000 miles. I've owned it for 2 years, and the first year I had no problems. Now it burns 1 - 2 quarts of oil for every tank of gas. Talking to people, 90% of them say it is my valve guides. But then 10% of them say it is rings. The people who say bad rings give these reasons as arguments: 360 engines only have 1 oil ring as compared to 2 on the original 318, 318 engines are made to take higher rpm's than the 360 -- and the truck has really high gearing, and 75 mph is pushing it. I believe that the fire department did run the engine hard, and I know that I've pushed the rpms in the 2 years I've had it. Compression on all cylinders was in the range of 95 - 110 lbs before I treated it with SeaFoam. After treatment compression averaged 115 - 130 lbs. Any thoughts on this?
Thanks
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