I am not sure an answer is possible here without an engine rebuild, but some others may have insights from my experience.
I have thought that after replacing gas tank, and electrical fuel pump that my gas mileage was too high (19 mpg) so I asked a local mechanic to confirm that the fuel system was working per specifications. I had accidentally pulled a spark plug wire out of spark plug socket trying to diagnose a miss-firing condition that developed after a 400 mile trip. I thought I had repaired the spark plug wire but the miss persisted and even worried me that the car was suffering some other dire problem. The car would start and idle but there was a dead miss as it seemed to be running on five. It was three months before I could get professional help. I had the car flattop towed to the shop where the following occurred.
First they confirmed my spark plug fix was sound. Then they pulled the spark plugs and they were found to be gaped way too wide and two of them looked kinda wet. A compression test revealed that the middle two cylinders had 10-20 compression while the others were 120 or so. The tech who has extensive experience with older and/or well worn gasoline engines opted to put a little ATF into each cylinder, wait overnight, install plugs and start engine. After letting the engine warm up and burn off the ATF a subsequent compression test revealed compression numbers of 120 or so across all six and the car ran smooth and very well.
It was noted that the radiator was missing almost a gallon of coolant. I have driven the car 150 miles around town with some high speed driving and the car seems to run great. But after the last run and after letting it cool completely I noticed some remaining pressure when I opened the radiator cap to check the coolant level which appears to be down a little from where it had been filled.
The car is a 1970 280 SE with only 87,000 miles confirmed by documentation. When I bought the car three years ago The head was removed and the gasket replaced. It was properly torqued again after some miles.
Brad Currie