old - Fazer Owners Club - old
Bikes, Hints'n'Tips => FZS600 Fazer => Topic started by: markd on 11 January 2012, 06:26:34 pm
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Hi Guys looking for some advice. recentlty bought fzs600 just had it services to find out it had been serviced correctly for long long time and now i am stuck with 2 siezed spark pluds on the left h side. any ideas how i can remove with out breaking them in there, and then needing to get helicoil done.
many thanks
mark
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A good soak with wd40 around them and get the engine realy hot before trying to shift them, don't try it with the engine cold, the expansion of the aluminium will make them slightly looser and help the wd40 get in.
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i would not use wd40,you want some penitrating oil,like plusgas.as Captain Haddock said get the engine hot
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:stop
Dont try and remove them when they are hot you will increase the risk of stripping the threads, only when stone cold :) . Undo them VERY slowly and apply more pen oil as they undo DONT just undo them either after a turn do them up quarter of a turn and keep doing this until they either undo or become free.
Take great care or you will strip the threads in the head and then it not only gets very expensive you may well have to remove the head!!! :'(
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Well to be honest, penetrating fluid will do fuck all as there is a gas tight seal there unless they are slightly loost.
Undoing them won't strip the threads in the head unless they were damaged putting them in. It's the torque on the sealing washer that's holding them.
Do it hot as the head will expand a little.
Try doing it up a very small amount and then undoing although this should not striclty be necessary.It looks as if a monkey put them in. Only usual way of stripping head threads is by over tightening.
Get a good fitting socket on them though to prevent slippage. Use a bit more force, you'll be fine.
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:stop
Dont try and remove them when they are hot you will increase the risk of stripping the threads,
pray tell why? The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C and technically the more brittle the metal, that is colder, the more chance of a fracture. Don't mind me I'm just an engineer and an old one at that :lol
What heating the engine will do is very slightly make the thread larger diameter compared to the steel plug thread which expands at a lower CTE.
Just wondered like.
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:stop
Dont try and remove them when they are hot you will increase the risk of stripping the threads,
pray tell why? The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C and technically the more brittle the metal, that is colder, the more chance of a fracture. Don't mind me I'm just an engineer and an old one at that :lol
What heating the engine will do is very slightly make the thread larger diameter compared to the steel plug thread which expands at a lower CTE.
Just wondered like.
Because when heated as you say it goes soft and grips the plug threads which makes removal harder and can and does strip threads, plugs should never be removed when an engine is hot. You being an engineer will know steal and aluminium do strange things when put together one being they tend to seize if the isn't something between them e.g. plug threads have a lacquer on them for that very reason. They also have very different tensile, sheer, wear and surface finish properties as mentioned above plugs mostly seize due to being over tightened i.e. stretched threads, fitting them with crap on the threads (very common on Fazers due to owner/stealers not cleaning the plug wells before/after removing the plugs and fitting a new ones), wet or the lacquer has worn off.
The torque between the collapsible washer isn't what is holding the plugs in it's the the threads in the head gripping the plug threads due to any one or all of the above mentioned. I've had bike in that the plugs had been done up so tight the washer had been crushed that much so as to be deformed up the sides of the plug body and could be pulled out leaving a gap :eek
I always put a little copper slip on the plug threads always make sure the plugs fully seat BEFORE torgueing, never had one seize yet :)
The threads are NOT gas tight the collapsible washer provides the seal once seated against the head and tightened to the correct torque. Once the seal is broken (undone slightly) the pen oil will do what it's designed to do and penetrate, using the method of undo/do up will further encourage the oil to spread and slowly release the grip of the aluminium.
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:stop
Dont try and remove them when they are hot you will increase the risk of stripping the threads,
pray tell why? The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C and technically the more brittle the metal, that is colder, the more chance of a fracture. Don't mind me I'm just an engineer and an old one at that :lol
What heating the engine will do is very slightly make the thread larger diameter compared to the steel plug thread which expands at a lower CTE.
Just wondered like.
Because when heated as you say it goes soft and grips the plug threads which makes removal harder and can and does strip threads, plugs should never be removed when an engine is hot. You being an engineer will know steal and aluminium do strange things when put together one being they tend to seize if the isn't something between them e.g. plug threads have a lacquer on them for that very reason. They also have very different tensile, sheer, wear and surface finish properties as mentioned above plugs mostly seize due to being over tightened i.e. stretched threads, fitting them with crap on the threads (very common on Fazers due to owner/stealers not cleaning the plug wells before/after removing the plugs and fitting a new ones), wet or the lacquer has worn off.
The torque between the collapsible washer isn't what is holding the plugs in it's the the threads in the head gripping the plug threads due to any one or all of the above mentioned. I've had bike in that the plugs had been done up so tight the washer had been crushed that much so as to be deformed up the sides of the plug body and could be pulled out leaving a gap :eek
I always put a little copper slip on the plug threads always make sure the plugs fully seat BEFORE torgueing, never had one seize yet :)
The threads are NOT gas tight the collapsible washer provides the seal once seated against the head and tightened to the correct torque. Once the seal is broken (undone slightly) the pen oil will do what it's designed to do and penetrate, using the method of undo/do up will further encourage the oil to spread and slowly release the grip of the aluminium.
The aluminium does not soften until about 300 degrees more, and NEVER, EVER EVER use copper grease on plug threads, never.
A little knowledge and imagination goes a long way and IF you actually believe the trash you typed we are going to have to agree to disagree on this one. :rollin ride safe.
I think the fact you torque the plugs properly has more to do with them not seizing. Most people overtighten.
Would agree, to a point, about dirt on the threads though.
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Boys
We've got another one :rolleyes :rolleyes :rolleyes :z :z :z
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I just love topics like this with never evers in without giving the reason why never evers are there in the first place.....
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if there werent ONES gnasher how would we know if we have or not have the right ONES :lol :lol :lol :lol
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:rollin :rollin :rollin :D
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Boys
We've got another one :rolleyes :rolleyes :rolleyes :z :z :z
Love it. Are you considered the font of all knowledge on this here discussion forum? You are definitely not a KAFA but have some odd ideas without substantiation but I can see there is resistance here :o
More than one way to skin a cat I spose. :'(
I'll retreat a bit and watch...................
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Boys
We've got another one :rolleyes :rolleyes :rolleyes :z :z :z
I've changed my mind, you are a KAFA. Sorry :-) :rollin I've sought second opinions from people that ACTUALLY know stuff
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Because when heated as you say it goes soft and grips the plug threads which makes removal harder and can and does strip threads, plugs should never be removed when an engine is hot. You being an engineer will know steal and aluminium do strange things when put together one being they tend to seize if the isn't something between them e.g. plug threads have a lacquer on them for that very reason. They also have very different tensile, sheer, wear and surface finish properties as mentioned above plugs mostly seize due to being over tightened i.e. stretched threads, fitting them with crap on the threads (very common on Fazers due to owner/stealers not cleaning the plug wells before/after removing the plugs and fitting a new ones), wet or the lacquer has worn off.
The torque between the collapsible washer isn't what is holding the plugs in it's the the threads in the head gripping the plug threads due to any one or all of the above mentioned.
what an unmitigated load of bollocks this all is I'm afraid. I wouldn't have you service my lawnmower far less a bike, and my lawn mower is a push one :lol
Watch out for doing any exhaust nuts up with a hot engine you may round them off as they will be soft due to the hear. A plug must be really soft when the engine is running too and goodness knows how exhaust headers don't just drip off the bike.....................
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I expect you also change engine oil when cold too to make sure the soft thread in the sump doesn't strip. Fine thread too so your theory must also hold true for that. Gnasher the KAFA :rollin :rollin I hope the other guys can see what a load of old tosh you type now. Made my day. Cheers
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This is very unlike me but here goes,Lumpy everyone has an opinion whether the same or not its thier opinion,calling anyone by the name you have above is not good,attacking anyone for an opinion that differs from your own is not really the way to gain peoples confidence or even add credence to your opinion.
I could go on but i wont as me being polite just winds me up the wrong way, truth be told, but there you go....
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This is very unlike me but here goes,Lumpy everyone has an opinion whether the same or not its thier opinion,calling anyone by the name you have above is not good,attacking anyone for an opinion that differs from your own is not really the way to gain peoples confidence or even add credence to your opinion.....
A KAFA is NOT a Kafir, so please don't make that simple mistake.
An opinion that is actually wrong in most ways and an ill thought out argument although his conviction is there.
I am trying to educate othrs that may be taken in and actually do what he does on their bikes. Bad advice is worse than no advice. Nothing there meant to offend you and KAFA is definitely not what you think it is, I expect :o
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soooo.... what was this topic about in the first place? :rollin
my opinion is that i've not heard about extracting when hot, but then again i've never had the problem so haven't gone looking for an answer. sorry.
good luck though.
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The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C
Its properties certainly can change at 160C. I would say its more likely to fracture but not because its soft, more probably because its become grainy.
Google "preciptation heat treatment".
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Well, I think this is the first time Gnasher has been accused of giving bad advice, I'd certainly take his over somebody who just turns up and starts calling people names.
So then, Lumpy, what is a KAFA?
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The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C
Its properties certainly can change at 160C. I would say its more likely to fracture but not because its soft, more probably because its become grainy.
Google "preciptation heat treatment".
I would imagine the aluminium alloy is resistant to this precipitation heat treatment to a major degree, not daft these nips. The coefficient of thermal expansion was really the important on here but Mr KAFA seems to think the alloy gets soft at operating temperatures. If he also knew about copper grease he would know, although thermally resistant to a point, it is a major no no once the evaporables evaporate and it becomes a congealed mass. You can look that up on the internet too.
All you need to do to look clever is pretend to know more than the masses and in this case it appears to have worked.
I'm newbieish on here but well known in other places, some say regrettably, and one of my saying has, for years, been bad advice is worse than no advice. Poor old gnashipoos cannot have any substatiation to a lot of his arguments as there is nothing to substantiate them as they are wrong, some of them anyways, some have a modicum of actual information and truth though.
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Well, I think this is the first time Gnasher has been accused of giving bad advice, I'd certainly take his over somebody who just turns up and starts calling people names.
Well, in this case he certainly did. Utilising the difference in coefficient of thermal expansion of dissimilar metals is a long established method for shifting stubborn steel screws out of alloy... made use of it myself only a month or so back to get the old brake discs off.
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Lumpy - Right or wrong, you're a dick :moon
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hi guys update on spark plugs one out and 1 snapped in half. so of to garage
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I would imagine the aluminium alloy is resistant to this precipitation heat treatment to a major degree, not daft these nips.
Its not an accidental thing done by daft people. Its an engineering thing done by engineers and accountants.
In this case they choose the cheapest aluminium that will do the job and I don't suppose they care what happens at the micron level at the extremes of temperature.
If Mr Gnasher says they can strip the threads if you try to shift stubborn plugs hot then I'd tend to believe him cos he's probably done hundreds and stripped 3.
I've got no evidence either way cos I've never had the problem cos I always put a small blob of grease (I use whatever's handy, usually LM3) on the plug threads before I screw them in.
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changing the subject a bit , what is the best thing to put on the plug threads then ? also is it not good putting copper slip on ex-up valve for the same reason as plugs again if so what's best to use ?
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hi guys update on spark plugs one out and 1 snapped in half. so of to garage
Sorry to hear that bud.
Would be great to know if you did one with engine hot and the other with engine cold. Could settle a little argument lol :rollin
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Sorry to hear that Mark.
Did the broken one come out cleanly complete with the electrode? If it's like this recent post:
http://foc-u.co.uk/index.php/topic,1160.0.html (http://foc-u.co.uk/index.php/topic,1160.0.html)
... then it may not put up much of a fight. For a start the tension is off the thread and secondly penetrating oil can get in there easily.
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Oh dear oh dear someone been a little rattled! :'(
Mr Lumpy seems to be attacking my statement of "Because when heated as you say it goes soft and grips the plug threads which makes removal harder and can and does strip threads, plugs should never be removed when an engine is hot."
The statement is incorrect and should have read "it stays soft and grips the plug". Teach me to read things before hitting the button. :rolleyes But doesn't I feel warrant his responses the key to the whole subject is in the next sentence.
"You being an engineer will know steal and aluminium do strange things when put together one being they tend to seize if the isn't something between them e.g. plug threads have a lacquer on them for that very reason." Aluminium has a property which allows it to grip it's self and certain other metals when heated or stressed i.e. over tightened why because it's soft among other things. Apply enough stress/heat/pressure and the stuff almost bonds to other metals e.g. plug threads, when flat surfaces are involved it can act like its been spread into the surface bit like chocolate. Which is why fine threads are chosen (more on threads later) and manufactures lacquer or coat them. As also pointed out steel and aluminium expand at different temperatures they also contact and gain and loose heat at differing rates the steel plug will contract slower then aluminium head, the head will grip the plug more then it would if the engine was cold. If you have a plug in the head that's been over tightened, wet (oxidised), stripped of lacquer/coating or has crap in threads and you undo it while the engine is hot you WILL increase the risk of stripping the thread.
Mr Lumpy's comparisons of exhaust header nuts/studs and drain plugs to support his argument of not removing plugs on aluminium engines when hot is not apples for apples and it really clutching at straws matey. :2fingers Exhaust headers on most bikes are a stud and nut certainly is on the Fazer, the stud is torqued into the head at about 18Nm and the nut torqued to 10Nm BOTH are steel the extra torque holds the stud in there hardly a comparison. Drain plugs are usually about 10mm long ish going through the aluminium/alloy or in some cases magnesium (both harder then cylinder head aluminium) sump of about 3 - 5mm thick using a course thread said we'd get back to them. Your average plug in most Jap engines are 25mm ish long going into a soft aluminium head using a fine thread. The thread contact surface area on the sump plug compared to the plug is tiny, you also tend to have a bit of oil about to lub things, drain plugs in my experience are buggered due to over tightening or cross threading full stop! :foc
Fazerrider your comparison is also not right mate :) you would have used one of two methods depending on what the issue was. Yamaha/Suzuki tend to put locking agent on their disc bolts and not all of them either just to catch you out :evil One method to break the adhesion is to apply gentle rapid heat to the bolt head ONLY this softens the locking agent allowing you to undo the bolt. The other method is to heat the local area around the bolt to expand the area releasing the threads assisting release, BOTH methods you only heat ONE part not like a plug/cylinder head where BOTH are heated.
The other area I will take issue with is " If he also knew about copper grease he would know, although thermally resistant to a point, it is a major no no once the evaporables evaporate and it becomes a congealed mass. You can look that up on the internet too." There are two main types of anti seize grease that are in use one for heat and that used to stop oxidation i.e. water ingress. Most stuff sold as copperslip (trade name) or anti seize grease is the latter and when heated to anything like exhaust temperatures just burns off and provides no protection in can and does act like locking agent in these applications. Then there's proper copper grease designed to withstand exhaust temperatures, particles of copper suspended in a carrier the carrier burns off leaving the copper particles behind it doesn't turn into a congealed mass but a layer of copper! :finger
The last bit of your statement You can look that up on the internet too is the clue to your majority of you're knowledge fella. :z :z :z
I'm certainly not a fountain of all knowledge never will be and I'm always ready to listen to others, I share my experiences with others to help them should they want to use it is up to them.
Personally I feel people like you who hover around internet forums being rude and aggressive focusing on an error because a person has posted something incorrectly, got the wrong end of the stick or as in this case didn't edit things thoroughly. Then posting knee jerk derogatory comments supported by stuff they find off other forums or the internet and backed up by some claim to being an engineer for Ex amount of years etc etc, are quite frankly sad little bullies.
End of the day Mr Lumpy I don't give a toss what you think or what you're opinion is :finger others I'm sure will draw their own conclusions!
The end :D
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And if anybody wants to argue the toss with the brake doctor further, before you scoot off to google some more crap, take a look at this link. From the fellas at Haynes, who probably have a reasonable idea of what they're talking about. You'll see that next to Pic 2 they say
Do not attempt to remove spark plugs while the engine is hot - not only may you burn yourself, you could damage the cylinder head.
and next to pic 3B
Put a smear of copper grease on the threads of each new plug and screw them into their holes
Of course, I'm sure they're wrong too... :rolleyes :rolleyes
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And here's the link :lol
http://www.haynes.co.uk/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Feature_SparkPlugsView?langId=-1&storeId=10001&catalogId=10001 (http://www.haynes.co.uk/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/Feature_SparkPlugsView?langId=-1&storeId=10001&catalogId=10001)
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:lol this is a good debate .
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The ally isn't softer at 160 degress C than it is at 0 degrees C
Its properties certainly can change at 160C. I would say its more likely to fracture but not because its soft, more probably because its become grainy.
Google "preciptation heat treatment".
I would imagine the aluminium alloy is resistant to this precipitation heat treatment to a major degree, not daft these nips. The coefficient of thermal expansion was really the important on here but Mr KAFA seems to think the alloy gets soft at operating temperatures. If he also knew about copper grease he would know, although thermally resistant to a point, it is a major no no once the evaporables evaporate and it becomes a congealed mass. You can look that up on the internet too.
All you need to do to look clever is pretend to know more than the masses and in this case it appears to have worked.
I'm newbieish on here but well known in other places, some say regrettably, and one of my saying has, for years, been bad advice is worse than no advice. Poor old gnashipoos cannot have any substatiation to a lot of his arguments as there is nothing to substantiate them as they are wrong, some of them anyways, some have a modicum of actual information and truth though.
BikersOracle, i remebr some of your posts well in the ER5 & 6 Forum ;)
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BikersOracle, i remember some of your posts well in the ER5 & 6 Forum ;)
ah yes, er, um yes :evil
been fun this one too.
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Oh dear oh dear someone been a little rattled! :'(
Cripes not me Mr Trumpet blower, better people have tried and failed :lol
Mr Lumpy's comparisons of exhaust header nuts/studs and drain plugs to support his argument of not removing plugs on aluminium engines when hot is not apples for apples and it really clutching at straws matey. :2fingers
no, it was taking the piss actually :rollin
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im sorry but you are all using far to bigger words for me to be reading at this time on a sunday morning, im sure he managed to get lots of useful advice from you all...... :rolleyes
The main one ive found is: dont ask for advice on stuck spark plugs..... :lol
just get a jackhammer..... or a good kick sometimes works... or better still.... get a garage to do it, if they mess it up they have to repair it :D
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And if anybody wants to argue the toss with the brake doctor further, before you scoot off to google some more crap, take a look at this link. From the fellas at Haynes, who probably have a reasonable idea of what they're talking about.
Of course, I'm sure they're wrong too... :rolleyes :rolleyes
Oh yes because nobody has ever questioned ANYTHING in a Haynes book of lies have they? :z :rollin
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Lumpy - Right or wrong, you're a dick :moon
:agree
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Lumpy - Right or wrong, you're a dick :moon
I can cope with that :lol as it's true. I can be helpful though, honestly............. :rolleyes
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All that advice was worthwhile then.... :rolleyes
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Madness but entertaining. :)
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madness maybe but it shows differences of opinions with 2 parties knowing they are right and documetary evidence to show it both ways. Conflicting advice is never good and there is more than one way to skin a cat. I obviously stick by my tried and tested methods and know the reasons why and have never had any issues. The other chap the same.
It was good fun. I was thinking about it on the ride in this morning and was going to post about the various galvanic reactions between metals and the barrier methods to reduce it, which doesn't include adding a catalyst :rollin but I'm not
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Yes, it's a shame the thread degenerated into such a ridiculous state. The OP can't have found it much use.
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Yes, it's a shame the thread degenerated into such a ridiculous state. The OP can't have found it much use.
but there again, it showed there is more than one idea on how to do things so I think he probably did. There is always the way that us oldies learned, by trial and error. I am particulalry aware that bad advice is worse than no advice and feel that he was given some bad advice,. hence the progression of the thread.
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So then, Lumpy, what is a KAFA?
http://translate.google.com/#hr/en/kafa (http://translate.google.com/#hr/en/kafa)
Anyway, shoul, or should I not put some copper grease on the spark plug threads?
My copy of Haynes doesn't say to do so... but doesn't say not to do so either. :)
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So then, Lumpy, what is a KAFA?
[url]http://translate.google.com/#hr/en/kafa[/url] ([url]http://translate.google.com/#hr/en/kafa[/url])
Anyway, shoul, or should I not put some copper grease on the spark plug threads?
My copy of Haynes doesn't say to do so... but doesn't say not to do so either. :)
Well, that was quite an interesting post :lol
Slaninar, it's either/or mate, perfectly up to you!
I've never used anything on my plugs in over 25 years without any issues whatsoever (touch wood), i think it's all to do with not over tightening them, which is the case with most screwed in things!
Plugs only need to be nipped up, not wrenched on, but if a blob of grease floats your boat then i can't see a problem.
I'm quite happy not to bother though.
For any newbies reading this though, before attempting to change your plugs go down to a petrol garage and use an air line to blow out the surrounding area of the spark plugs, 'cos that area can collect a load of shite over time, and you really don't want it all falling down the spark plug hole for obvious reasons! ;)
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I've never put anything on plug threads and the only ones I've had any problems with are ones I've not fitted. I guess my next post will be help I can't remove the plugs I've fitted lol. Anyway I'm still unsure what a rope made from coconut fibres had to do with anything but hey ho.
Andy
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Probably a bad idea to add this now things are calming down, but as Darrsi suggested, when I got my iridium plugs fitted last week, I took the bike down the local bike shop. The bloke who runs it works alone, and has a long waiting list, his work is in high demand! When he fitted my plugs, he waited till the engine was cold (the plugs were stiff, but not seized). He also added proper copper slip to the plugs when he fitted them into the head.
Let the flaming begin again. :rolleyes I was never here.... :pc
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I find that a lot of crap tends to gather around the plugs on the fazer so I tend to remove and clean the plugs every few months to avoid this problem happening. I'd personally always do it with a cold engine and use the loosen a bit, tighten a bit method.
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I find that a lot of crap tends to gather around the plugs on the fazer so I tend to remove and clean the plugs every few months to avoid this problem happening. I'd personally always do it with a cold engine and use the loosen a bit, tighten a bit method.
"..loosen a bit, tighten a bit.."
It must take you weeks to change your plugs :lol
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I'd prefer to spend the extra minute tightening and loosening stuburn bolts, screws, plugs etc than an hour drilling them out :2fingers :lol
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I always put a little engine oil round the threads before sticking them in.
Not my idea, a motor mechanic I knocked around with always did this, he took the dip stick out of the engine and dribbled the oil on the threads so I thought if HE's doing it, must be OK...
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Like i said, it's all about not abusing them.
Do them up as much as you can with your fingers to avoid cross threading, then just nip them up.
I handle film cameras at work with tiny screws so i s'pose i've learnt not to be heavy handed at all.