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Appearance |
Possible cause/resolution |
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Normal
Light brown, tan or grey firing end. |
A good indicator that the plug is functioning correctly
and general engine conditions are good. |
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Dry and wet fouling
Fouling, either dry (top - matt black, sooty) or wet (bottom - gloss
black, sticky),
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Can be caused by many different conditions. Carbon
deposits build up when the plug fails to fire correctly and burn them
off. Air/fuel mixture too rich, choke stuck on, electrical problem,
extended periods of low speed driving, plug heat range too cold. All
should be investigated |
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Overheating
When overheating occurs, deposits which have accumulated on the insulator
tip may melt and give the tip a glazed appearance |
Possible causes are overadvanced ignition timing, air/fuel
mixture too lean, water or oil level too low, plugs not fitted (tightened)
correctly, plug heat range too hot. |
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|
Deposits
Insualtor nose and electrodes encrusted with a build of deposits -
usually off white in colour.
|
This is often caused by oil leakage through the piston
rings or valve seals. Could be due to the wrong viscosity of oil being
used. |
|
|
Lead fouling
Lead deposits on the insulator nose. These are usually a yellowish
brown in colour. |
Lead content of petrol used is too high. Try petrol
with a lower lead content. |
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Breakage
Physical damage to the insulator nose.
|
Usually caused by abnormal thermal expansion in the
combustion chamber. Maybe thermal heating or cooling shock. Causes
as for overheating above. |
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Normal life
Growth of the plug gap during a plug's working life is normal. However,
the increased gap will mean the spark is less efficient and hence
fuel is wasted and strain is put on the ignition system. |
Plugs are at the end of servicable life. Replace plugs
as a set. |
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Abnormal erosion
This is accelerated growth of the gap
|
due to the effects of corrosion, oxidation and reaction
with the lead in petrol. |
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Melting
The electrode surface will probably appear lustrous and uneven.
|
Due to excessively high temperatures in the combustion
chamber. Causes as for overheating above. |
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|
Erosion, Corrosion, Oxidisation
The surfaces of the electrodes are rough, in extreme circumstances
the electrode material will have oxidised to the point of turning
green |
Possibly due to age, vehicle standing for a long time
without use. |
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|
Lead Erosion
The ground electrode will appear worn away, the central electrode
will appear chipped and the insulator nose will take on a yellowish
brown. |
This is due to chemical reaction between the nickel
alloy electrodes and the lead compounds in petrol. |