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Spark plugs

Elevrprman

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#1
Do they require a special tool to remove? I’ve tried a 14mm thin wall socket but don’t think it’s going down in enough
 

Handy Andy

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#2
They are DEEP well types so thin wall may give clearance but it does not guarantee full reach to the hex nut ferrule it has.
 
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Elevrprman

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Thread Starter #3
They are DEEP well types so thin wall may give clearance but it does not guarantee full reach to the hex nut ferrule it has.
So is there a place to get the right socket for them? I got one from Auto zone & one from Amazon. They are only like a mm larger than the round base under the hex nut. Is there a thinner socket available somewhere?
 

Handy Andy

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#4
These may need to use the "socket" part of the spark plug socket to help with reach.

Meaning that the plug may be too long for the socket to fully reach the nut on the shell of the plug - because the socket may be a spark plug type, but if the terminal is interfereing with the "square" of the 3/8's socket

The problem may not be with the width, more the depth - meaning that when you use a 3/8 - ratchet, the "3/8" used to hold the socket is the problem - the clearance of the terminal - because of the length (Height) of the plug is a potential problem.

1651799354362.png
The grommet used to hold the plug in the socket, can also add a fitting problem - the grommet can't fit the insulator - the hole for it may be too small for the insulator so it's too tight to fit. So, you can't seem to push into the hole to hold the insulator, so it doesn't break and let the tool seat the socket onto the nut of the shell.

There's some grey area of conditions of you can encounter with plugs and issues around both the boot, the "coil on the plug" and these in seat types of designs - where dirt, debris and age can erode the boot to make it difficult to remove the plug because there is so much dirt and debris in the hole to keep the socket lifted away from the shell so it can't even reach the nut let alone fit the hole.

1651799980557.png
From a Ford Focus...
1651800874347.png

So, if you get the whole boot out, what is still in the hole - is there dirt or debris?

So, we need to know what kind of conditions or what you're experiencing?
 

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Elevrprman

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TN
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2018 Focus hatchback
Thread Starter #5
My car is only 4 years old and clean. No debris in there. The socket with the rachet extension fit right down on the new not installed plug so the depth of the plug into the socket is no issue. I even tried with extension only half way in. The issue seems to be the clearance of the block bore size around the old plugs hex nut. The socket is like 1/16 than the new plugs round base just under the hex nut. I think the bore is only as big as the plug I’m considering grinding down my socket wall a bit. It seems they’d sell a special socket for this job. Thanks engineers- grrr. I appreciate your explanation and I’ll try again.
 

Handy Andy

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#6
Got a link to the tool?

I've used my own purchased decades ago - so I'm surprised to know this...er, socket - size problem.

Remember too, the tool fits the current NEW plug, I've owned vehicles that have had plugs from their OEM versus say a different brand like - Champion - have a different "hex" nut size - so one you (finally) get the old plugs out - you can switch to the new and if they are working for the correct heat range and gap size with the performance you'd expect - that's pretty much what you stick to.

It's also one of those "games" makers play to keep you from going overboard and using wrong plug types. Toyota and Suzuki were notorious for this... (still are in one fashion or another)

Just wondering - are you keeping the same plug or using something different to upgrade it?
 

Handy Andy

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#7
Heres why...

I did up another article I did to help someone else out - but while doing that research, I came across this...

To spoil it, remember SAE versus Metric.

Why I said the above of Toyota and Suzuki - amongst others like KIA (Aspire), SUNBEAM (Tiger), Sprint (Metro/GEO) - any one type or brand of car that got introduced to the USA thru one of our Big Brands like GM, FORD and Chrysler - these "work alongside" details of having to stock parts of different size and metrics - the hardware and all the nuances to go along with it - ADDED to this problem of knowing which socket to use and the go to for the various types of engines and spark plugs used in them.

The reason why this comes up is how some interpret charts for the various plugs and their cross-reference equivalents

Here...
1656255983907.png

AMBER Arrow - points to the THREAD size
RED Arrow - Points to the HEX Nut size


So, to help the next one - SOME of the SAE and Metric size are considered to be nearly the same in fitment for the size of the mm to fractional inch are close for most tolerances for the tool and bits, that - both could be used and considered safe for torquing and not rounding off the shoulders of the nut.

Although another issue that sidelines this, deals with what some show as an ingenious idea to show the insanity of different hardware used in older vehicles versus todays, deals with why there are

10- sided versus 12-sided even penta-sided - points in sockets and how some nuts are - just plain crazy...
1656257127341.png
 

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