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Spark Plugs On A Glanza


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Right this does my fucking head in, twice now, i have washed my car, the following day, when i go near 80, they burn out, as water got into them.

it costs 50 quid to get them changed too! They are platinum ones aswell

anyone else got this problem?

Anyway, i was going to do it myself to save some money, so is there a guide on how to change the spark plugs, cant be to hard id imagine?

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easy peasy mate, all you need is the correct tool (about £4 from halfords or wherever) and away you go. just tighten until the collapsable washer compacts and you feel it tighten up and you're done, a chimp could do it really.

if water's getting in then there's a problem with your leads letting water in, they should overlap the rocker somewhat to prevent water getting in. perhaps look into getting some more leads, or apply a small dab of sealant to ensure water doesn't seep through.

i never had a problem with mine in over a year, and i used to fire the hose directly in the bonnet vent ;)

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right, two seconds, here is an image of my engine, removed the cover, from where i think the spark plugs are.

Ok, so see the bit i have surrounded with the red square, thats what i am removing right?

then what tool removes the bits surrounded by the blue sqaures?

sparks.jpg

or am i completely wrong, if so where are the sparks

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haha, no mate. those four bolts allows you to remove or move the top mount intercooler (the big black radiator looking thing in the middle of that pic) so you can access the spark plugs and leads.

once you've undone those bolts, loosen up the circlips holding the hoses on and you'll be able to swivel the intercooler up so you can access the plugs and leads.

you can see one of the leads to the left of that pic, just next to the rocker cover filter.

once the intercooler is up in the air or remove, you'll see four of those. thats the leads, which you can literally just give a tug and they'll pop out. you'll then have a direct view of the plugs, well, with the use of a torch, so you can see if there's any water in there. the leads look aftermarket (big chunky blue NGK/Magnecor items from the looks of it), so it may just been that they aren't in position properly, thus allowing water in. either way you wont need to replace them as they've obviously been done recently.

the only tool you'll need to get the plugs out is a plug removal tool, as i said its a few quid, however look online for instruction and torque figures for the plugs as you really REALLY dont want to overtighten them. you'll know if they're undertightened however, as it'll either not run, or run like a bag of shit.

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