Lets say you do a piston soak on a 2L 4 cylinder engine.
After the soak is done (assuming liquid is still pooling on top the pistons), the engine is slanted so the liquid pools to one side and the liquid is vacuumed out using 1/4" tubing. Little liquid is left pooling on the slated piston tops. Do you think this is enough to hydrolock the engine?
I've seen it mentioned to crank the engine after the soak with plugs, coils and injectors removed/disconnected; I've done that once and I got some mist out, but I wonder if it is really necessary.
After the soak is done (assuming liquid is still pooling on top the pistons), the engine is slanted so the liquid pools to one side and the liquid is vacuumed out using 1/4" tubing. Little liquid is left pooling on the slated piston tops. Do you think this is enough to hydrolock the engine?
I've seen it mentioned to crank the engine after the soak with plugs, coils and injectors removed/disconnected; I've done that once and I got some mist out, but I wonder if it is really necessary.