Well, after almost a month of happy motoring, it looks like I'll be pulling my motor to re-ring it.
I think I have a grasp of what went wrong and why, but I want to run it by the folks here to make sure I have the right understanding of the cause and it's effects.
First of all, I should mention that I was running in closed loop mode, with a large potential fuel enrichment number. This was done at my tuner's suggestion, and "seemed like a good idea at the time", even though we had it tuned to the point where, in practice, very little O2 correction was needed.
Secondly, I need to mention that I had my WBO2 sensor mounted in the mid-pipe, in front of the cat. My exhaust has four components: downpipe, mid-pipe, cat, and cat-back. The cat has V-band clamps attaching it to the pipes on either side, but the downpipe-to-mid-pipe connection is with a more traditional three bolt header flange.
Here's what happened: several of the downpipe-to-mid-pipe bolts loosened on me, causing the connection to separate by a half inch or so. Since the O2 sensor was located in the mid-pipe, on the wrong side of this big ol' exhaust leak, it was suddenly reading leaner than it should have (or so I'm theorizing). The ECU compensated for this by kicking in a lot more fuel. Since this happened at freeway speeds and positive boost, things got ugly quickly: the motor began to ping quite a bit. I had to nurse it along a little ways before I could pull over, and by that time I believe the damage was done.
After having the truck towed home, I pulled the plugs. Detonation had almost closed the gap of the plug in the #1 cylinder and cracked/split its insulator. I changed the plugs (the other plugs looked fine), bolted the exhaust back up, and tried starting the motor; it ran very rough, as if at least one cylinder wasn't firing (actual A/F was around 10.3:1 while it was running in this state, while the target is more like 13:1). I did a compression test, and my compression in the #1 & #2 cylinders was 90 psi, and compression in the #3 & #4 cylinders was 62(!) psi. Yuck! I'll be doing a leakdown test before I pull the motor, but I am pretty sure I am looking at broken rings in each cylinder.
Does this sound right? I have an o-ringed deck, and really don't think I simply took out the headgasket (somethign I have experienced). I haven't had this happen before, so I'm trying to learn as much as I can from this -- everything from where NOT to mount the O2 sensor to how much fuel correction NOT to dial in
But I am most curious about the connection between excess fuel, detonation, and broken rings.
Thanks for whatever additional insight anyone can share.
Jeff

First of all, I should mention that I was running in closed loop mode, with a large potential fuel enrichment number. This was done at my tuner's suggestion, and "seemed like a good idea at the time", even though we had it tuned to the point where, in practice, very little O2 correction was needed.
Secondly, I need to mention that I had my WBO2 sensor mounted in the mid-pipe, in front of the cat. My exhaust has four components: downpipe, mid-pipe, cat, and cat-back. The cat has V-band clamps attaching it to the pipes on either side, but the downpipe-to-mid-pipe connection is with a more traditional three bolt header flange.
Here's what happened: several of the downpipe-to-mid-pipe bolts loosened on me, causing the connection to separate by a half inch or so. Since the O2 sensor was located in the mid-pipe, on the wrong side of this big ol' exhaust leak, it was suddenly reading leaner than it should have (or so I'm theorizing). The ECU compensated for this by kicking in a lot more fuel. Since this happened at freeway speeds and positive boost, things got ugly quickly: the motor began to ping quite a bit. I had to nurse it along a little ways before I could pull over, and by that time I believe the damage was done.
After having the truck towed home, I pulled the plugs. Detonation had almost closed the gap of the plug in the #1 cylinder and cracked/split its insulator. I changed the plugs (the other plugs looked fine), bolted the exhaust back up, and tried starting the motor; it ran very rough, as if at least one cylinder wasn't firing (actual A/F was around 10.3:1 while it was running in this state, while the target is more like 13:1). I did a compression test, and my compression in the #1 & #2 cylinders was 90 psi, and compression in the #3 & #4 cylinders was 62(!) psi. Yuck! I'll be doing a leakdown test before I pull the motor, but I am pretty sure I am looking at broken rings in each cylinder.
Does this sound right? I have an o-ringed deck, and really don't think I simply took out the headgasket (somethign I have experienced). I haven't had this happen before, so I'm trying to learn as much as I can from this -- everything from where NOT to mount the O2 sensor to how much fuel correction NOT to dial in

Thanks for whatever additional insight anyone can share.
Jeff