Sunday, July 12, 2009

Checking Your Spark Plugs Conditions (Fault Diagnosis)

Spark plugs are important as it ignites the air and fuel mixture within the combustion chamber during the power stroke. But spark plugs do fail from time to time due to excessive usage. Due to these, spark plugs are replaced according to manufactures specification. During replacement, the spark plugs which have been taken out from the engine will be checked to see the engine condition. These are the common conditions which tells weather your engine is in good condition or not....


Appearance

Conditions

Possible cause

Normal
Light brown, tan or grey firing end.

A good indicator that the plug is functioning correctly and general engine conditions are good.

Dry and wet fouling
Fouling, either dry (top - matt black, sooty) or wet (bottom - gloss black, sticky),


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

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.

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.

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.

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.

Abnormal erosion
This is accelerated growth of the gap


Due to the effects of corrosion, oxidation and reaction with the lead in petrol.

Melting
The electrode surface will probably appear lustrous and uneven.


Due to excessively high temperatures in the combustion chamber. Causes as for overheating above.

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.

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.



Any comments or questions just feel free to comment about it.

No comments:

Post a Comment