

“Runs good” can be one of the most dangerous phrases in engine building.
I’ve seen engines make solid power on the dyno, idle smoothly, and still have ring seal issues hiding underneath. Then a few weeks later? Oil consumption. Blow-by. Weak cylinders. Tear it all back apart.
That’s why leak down testing matters so much. Especially when the cylinder head is already off the engine.
At VAC Motorsport, Tony from @vacbmw recently showed off a specialty tool designed specifically for this exact situation. And honestly, it solves a problem many engine builders deal with every day: getting accurate leak down numbers without guessing where the air is escaping.
Most people are familiar with a standard leak down test. You thread a tester into the spark plug hole, pressurize the cylinder, and listen.
Air coming out of the intake? Intake valve leak.
Exhaust? Exhaust valve problem.
Oil cap or crankcase? Probably rings.
Simple enough. Until it isn’t.
The issue is that traditional leak down testing with the cylinder head installed can sometimes leave you chasing ghosts. You’re trying to determine whether the problem is the valves, the rings, or somewhere else entirely. On a tired performance engine, especially one that’s been overheated, detonated, or pushed hard on boost, things get murky fast.
I remember talking with a customer years ago who swore his turbo BMW had “perfect compression.” Compression numbers looked decent too. But once the head came off and we isolated the bottom end, the ring seal was nowhere near healthy. The engine was bleeding power the entire time.
That’s where a dedicated block-mounted leak down testing tool changes the game.
This tool mounts directly to the engine block after the cylinder head has been removed.
Instead of testing through the spark plug hole, the fixture bolts down over the cylinders using the head gasket surface. Then you connect your standard leak down tester and introduce compressed air directly into the cylinder.
Now you’re testing only the pistons and piston rings.
Nothing else.
No valves. No head gasket concerns. No uncertainty.
That’s the beauty of it.
Tony explains it perfectly in the video. Once the tool is bolted down, the test becomes incredibly focused and repeatable. Whatever percentage of leakage you see is directly related to ring seal and cylinder condition.
That’s valuable information. Real information.
On a stock commuter car, you might get away with mediocre ring seal for a while.
On a high-performance BMW engine build? Different story.
Loose sealing cylinders can affect:
And once boost gets involved, small sealing issues become big problems quickly.
That’s why serious engine builders obsess over leak down numbers. Not because they enjoy extra work. Because numbers don’t lie.
A properly sealed engine simply performs better.
One detail I really liked from Tony’s walkthrough was the ability to test two cylinders at once.
That may sound small. It’s not.
Anyone who spends time around engine assembly knows setup time adds up fast. Constantly repositioning tools slows everything down. This fixture allows builders to bolt the tool down once and move efficiently through the testing process.
Less hassle. More consistency.
Honestly, those little workflow improvements are usually designed by people who actually build engines every day. You can tell this wasn’t designed in a boardroom.
This type of leak down tester is especially useful when:
It’s also incredibly useful for engine shops that want hard data before recommending a rebuild.
Customers appreciate facts. Especially when expensive decisions are involved.
This always comes up.
While every engine combination is different, lower leakage percentages are better. A healthy performance engine generally wants very low leakage numbers with consistency across all cylinders.
The key is consistency.
One cylinder showing dramatically different numbers than the others usually tells a story. Sometimes it’s ring wear. Sometimes cylinder wall damage. Sometimes improper seating.
The point is this: accurate testing matters.
And if you can eliminate variables during testing, your diagnosis becomes much more trustworthy.
There’s a huge difference between replacing parts and understanding engines.
Tools like this help close that gap.
The VAC Motorsports cylinder leak down testing fixture is one of those specialty tools that makes total sense once you see it in action. It removes guesswork and gives engine builders a cleaner picture of what’s happening inside the cylinders after the head comes off.
That matters. Especially when expensive BMW engine builds are on the line.
Because at the end of the day, “good enough” measurements usually lead to expensive lessons later.
And nobody wants to tear an engine apart twice.