It's likely wear in the ring grooves and rocking it allows the ring to seat, that's the click you're hearing. If the oil burn is good and the cylinders look ok through the borescope, then don't be concerned. Nothing unusual about a low reading initially, then improving when the prop is rocked back and forth a little
Mike Busch is a self righteous muppet, but I do agree with him that too many cylinders get pulled unnecessarily. If the oil burn is good and it looks fine through the borescope then don't get too concerned with the leakrates, just use it as a diagnostic tool to find any real issues. I challenge anyone to notice a performance difference with a 20/80 cylinder vs a 78/80, it would have to be verging on catastrophic failure if it didn't make rated power
Having said that, I'm changing out a cylinder on my 402 today due to a burned valve
I don't condone anything outside manufacturers ICA's and of course I'm not accounting for that niggling back of the mind concern that something is not quite right that many owners get when there's an issue like this. But after 30 years maintaining and flying all manner of aircraft, I know the chances are about zero that a low leakrate will cause an engine failure
