No matter what
kind of bike, truck, buggy, ATV, watercraft or snowmobile you operate,
chances are just about 100% that you have one or more spark plugs firing
the fuel and creating the power required for forward motion.
If the plug(s)
quits working, your engine stops. Or maybe things start sputtering. Could
be the plug is beginning to foul.
So you yank it out
and take a look at it. But what are you really looking for? What
kind clues can a visual check tell you about what's going on inside
that engine?
Let's walk
through it.
A spark plug is
inserted into the engine, the engine is operated for a while, then the
spark plug is removed for examination. It shows how hot the plug has
been while the engine was running and also tells you about a variety of
other symptoms. This procedure is called ?reading" the
plugs, and it's probably the single most important guide to tuning an
engine.
Plugs do a simple
task: they make sparks to ignite the fuel-air mixture in the
combustion chamber. They have to cope with heat, pressure,
vibration, noxious fumes, liquids and chemicals. When you remove
the plug, it can tell you how bad (or good) things were in the
combustion chamber, just by its appearance.
WHAT'S IN A
PLUG?
The bottom part of
a plug is metal, threaded to screw into a hole in the cylinder head, and
is often called the shell . The diameter of the
threaded section, or the diameter of the hole it fits, is specified in
millimeters (mm). Common plug diameters are 10mm, 12mm and 14mm. There
are many stories around about boneheads trying to stuff a 14 mm plug
into a 12 mm hole.
The length of the
threaded portion of the shell is called reach , and
it's usually measured in inches. Common reach lengths are 1/2-inch and
3/4-inch, although there are many other reaches. You can
install a plug with incorrect reach, but you can also really screw up an
engine by doing so. So always put a plug in with the correct reach. Period.
Inside the metal
shell is an insulator , usually white, which is
tapered at the working end of the plug. The tapered part of the
insulator is called the nose .
Right in the
center of the insulator, is an electrical conductor which connects
the electrical terminal at the top of the plug to a round wire
that sticks out of the insulator nose at the firing end of the plug.
This round wire is
called the center electrode . The main purpose of the
insulator is to prevent the electrical spark current from going anywhere
except down to the center electrode.
Welded to the
bottom of the shell is a small piece of metal called the side
electrode , which sticks over toward the center
electrode and forms an air gap between the two electrodes. The ignition
current is supposed to jump across the air gap between electrodes and
make a spark. The name of the air gap is spark gap.
HOT PLUGS VS
COLD PLUGS?
Just about
everyone has heard that plugs have heat ratings, and are called
?hot" or ?cold" types. Some people think that means the plug
either makes the engine run hot or cold, which is completely wrong.
The amount of heat
a plug brings into an engine due to the electrical sparks is so small
it's insignificant. The amount of heat a plug removes from an engine
is also small.
Those ratings - ?hot"
and ?cold" - mean simply this: a plug becomes very
hot in an engine, so we say it's a hot-running plug ? or just hot. Another
plug doesn't reach such a high temperature, so we say it's a
cold-running plug ? or just cold.
The firing end of
a hot plug reaches a higher temperature than a cold plug, in the same
engine, under identical operating conditions. The metal shell
of each plug will operate at very nearly the same temperature as the
metal of the head itself, because the plugs are screwed into the head
and there is a good path for heat flow between shell and head.
Heat gathered by
the insulator nose tends to accumulate there, because the insulator
material is not a very good conductor of heat. The path for heat flow is
away from the insulator nose. Heat has to flow upwards along the nose
until it reaches the place where the insulator is in mechanical contact
with the shell.
From there, heat
can flow into the shell, then to the metal of the engine.
If the path for
heat flow is short and relatively easy, more heat will escape and
the nose of the plug will tend to run cooler.
If the path for
the heat flow is long and difficult, more heat will remain at the tip of
the insulator and the plug will run hotter. The main difference
between hot-running and cold-running plugs is the length of the
insulator nose.
Those two
electrodes also get hot. The center electrode gets hotter than the side
electrode, because the center one loses heat to an insulator, whereas
the side electrode loses heat directly to the metal shell of the plug.
Spark plugs are
manufactured with different heat ratings, from very cold to very
hot, so a suitable plug can be found for your engine, depending on what
you need, based on your riding or driving conditions. Plugs with
the same diameter and reach will have different lengths of the insulator
nose section and different type numbers to indicate which runs hot and
which runs colder.
These plugs are
mechanically interchangeable, but will run at different operating
temperatures in the same engine. Part of the tuning problem is to find a
plug that survives in an engine.
WHAT HAPPENS
WHEN THE PLUG IS TOO HOT?
It's easy to
overheat a plug in an engine. A mixture that's too lean will do it,
because the gasoline drawn into the firing chamber has a cooling effect.
If there is not enough gasoline, there is not enough cooling.
Working the engine
hard at slow speeds ? such as running uphill in a deep sandwash ?
will do it, because the engine is generating a lot of heat but airflow
for cooling is reduced by the slow speed of travel.
Using the wrong
spark plug will also do it also. If you are not using the plug specified
in your owner's - manual, you might have problems.
When a spark plug
gets too hot, the insulator may boil and bubble On examination, it will
be plain that it has been too hot. Also, the metal electrodes may melt
away and disappear. If any of these bad things happen, that's good.
The worst result
of a too-hot plug that fails-to destroy itself, is when it destroys the
engine instead; this is called pre-ignition. If the tip of
the plug becomes hot enough to ignite the fresh mixture being drawn into
the cylinder, then the incoming mixture will start to burn without
waiting for the spark to happen.
Ignition due to
any hot spot in the cylinder begins before the proper time for ignition,
so it is called pre-ignition. Anything in the combustion chamber
which gets hot enough can cause pre-ignition, but typically the end
of the spark plug is the cause. When the mixture is firing sooner than
it should, that's like advancing the spark too much, and no matter
what causes it, early ignition makes engines heat up, causing
pre-ignition. Eventually, something melts, which comes under the heading
of a bad thing.
WHAT HAPPENS
WHEN THE PLUG IS TOO COLD?
You can install a
plug which is too cold-running for the engine. Or you can have an engine
that's running way too cool, such as riding ten miles downhill on a
frosty morning in the mountains.
Whatever the
cause, if the nose of the plug is not hot enough, it will gradually
accumulate deposits, known as fouling. During normal engine
operation, residue from the combustion process hits the insulator nose.
This may include carbon, unburned fuel and oil, and chemical additives
present in both fuel and oil.
If the insulator
nose and electrodes are hot enough, the combustion deposits will be
continuously burned off by the heat of the plug. The ideal situation is
to have the deposits burned off as fast as they accumulate, so the
insulator nose stays fairly clean and free of deposits.
If the deposits
accumulate on the plug because it is not reaching a high enough
temperature to burn them off, the gradual accumulation will eventually
short out, or foul, the plug. The fouling is electrically conductive and
forms a path along the insulator, which connects the center electrode to
the metal shell of the plug.
The spark current
will flow along the fouling path and will not jump across the
spark gap . The engine stops running, but all you have lost is
a spark plug. Fouling due to a too-cold plug is much better than
pre-ignition due to a too-hot plug.
PICKING THE
RIGHT PLUG
If the tip of the
plug gets hotter than about 1500 degrees Fahrenheit, electrode burning
and pre-ignition will result. Below 600 or 700 degrees, fouling will
occur. A normal spark plug gets hot enough just above idle to burn
away fouling deposits, and when running at full throttle, the plug is
still not hot enough to cause problems. The reason a plug gets hotter at
full throttle is simply because more fuel is burning in there.
A plug which is
too hot will run hotter than normal over the entire range, and at full
throttle, will be into the pre-ignition zone. Similarly, a plug
which is too cold tends to foul more easily when the engine isn't
working hard.
Reading the plug
from your engine gives you some clues about whether it is too hot or too
cold.
READING THOSE
SPARK PLUGS!
To read a plug,
you must first prepare it properly for reading, so it will give you the
real story. That means you can't just go over to an engine and yank
the plug. You have to know how the machine was operated in the period
just before you look at the plug, and the machine must be run in some
steady condition for a while before taking the reading.
You can't just
make a fast pass down a dirt road, then pull into the pits and let the
engine idle for a while before shutting it off. This kind of a reading
from a spark plug will be totally worthless. A plug can tell you only
about a recent, sustained, single operating condition.
First off, the
engine should be in reasonably good tune and mechanical condition, and
the plug should also be in reasonable condition and the plug proper
for the engine.
Then you can begin
by making a flat-out, full- throttle run up a slight incline for about a
mile. If you try that with a worn engine, or in bad tuning
condition, it may not last the flat-out mile.
But if it does, at
the end of your run, pull in the clutch and kill the ignition. Coast to
a stop and don't run the engine anymore until you yank the plug. That
is called cutting clean. What the plug will now tell you is how
things were inside the engine at full throttle.
The best way to
read the plug after removing it from the engine is to use an illuminated
magnifier. With that, you can see small details and get more
information. The average person just looks at the plug with his
natural eyeballs and learns some things, but not as many things as with
a magnifying glass.
The main indicator
is the general appearance of the insulators. If it looks like it
has been too hot ? it has. If it's showing some deposits,
chances are it's too cold.
Now you're ready
for a second plug reading, and this one should be taken at
mid-throttle. The full-throttle test tells you about the condition in
the combustion chamber while it was on the main jet, because that's
what controls mixture strength at full throttle.
The half-throttle
reading tells you about the needle and needle jet (or mid-range jets)
performance, because they control that part of the engine
performance. Most average tuners won't even perform this part of
plug reading and tuning, and will be happy with full throttle runs and
readings.
READING AND
CHANGES
If you yank a plug
and find a nice off-white or slightly tan/gray color with new-looking
electrode shapes and no evidence of problems, the thing to do is smile
real big and put the back in
If you find black
fouling to suggest a too-cold plug, or the plug is burned white and
melty looking, you better do something to correct the situation.
You can certainly change plugs, provided you have the recommended
normal plug in the engine. Most manufacturers select the normal plug for
normal riding conditions. You can go colder or hotter, or you
may even have to make carburetion or timing changes. We can't get
into all that here, but you get the drift.
If your wife or
girlfriend just putts around all day, they aren't making enough heat
to keep the plug clean. This is the perfect condition for you to
use the next hotter heat rating to see if it helps. You find the type
number of the next hotter plug by checking a spark plug selection chart,
or by asking at the parts counter.
If the plug looks
burned and you have been riding all day flat-out, tucked-in and too
fast, you should more than likely to go one step colder in plug heat
rating. If you don't have the correct plug installed, or its
next-door neighbor on the heat rating chart, your best bet is to try the
correct plug first and then go from there.
If you can't
solve the problem by a one-step heat rating change of spark plugs, you
may need to rejet the carb, or do mechanical work on the engine.
PLUG VARIATIONS
You'll find all
kinds of plugs, plug materials, designs and variations. And
you'll also find wild claims and promises to match. Most plugs
have what is called the conventional gap style, and it doesn't have
any letter identification. It is the common plug used in cars and
motorcycles. There are zillions of these around, giving good service.
In the I-gap, the
side electrode is cut back partially so it only coversabout half of the
center electrode. This design is less subject to foulingdue to
something getting between the electrodes. This is often considered
to be a special design for two-stroke engines.
A Y-gap, or
extended-nose plug, has a wider heat range than a conventional plug,
which means it operates well over a greater range of
temperatures. The insulator nose and gap will stick out pretty far into
the combustion chamber when this plug is installed. Because of the
extended nose, the tip of the plug is farther out into the combustion
area and receives more heat at low engine speeds. This tends to prevent
fouling at low operating temperatures.
At open throttle
where you might expect this plug to heat up more than a conventional
design, the extended nose gets a good blast of cool, fresh
mixture during each intake and therefore it gets less hot than a
conventional plug. This _ extends the operating range to higher engine
temperatures. This is normally considered to be a four-stroke plug.
An extended-nose
plug cannot be casually substituted for a conventional plug type,
because the extended nose may get hit by the piston, or a valve. If it
is specified as original equipment, you know there's enough clearance
for the long nose.
A G-gap plug is
also called a fine-wire plug, because the electrodes are made of smaller
wire. A spark will jump at lower voltage across a gap formed of sharp
edges or smaller electrodes. Both the I-gap and G-gap benefit from this.
The J-gap ?shows" the center electrode the sharp edge of the side
electrode and that gives a lower firing voltage requirement.
The Gold Palladium
fine-wire design has the same advantage, because the electrodes are
smaller. When the electrodes are made smaller, precious metals such as
gold and platinum are better able to withstand heat and erosion. G-gap
plugs cost more, but when properly used, they are worth it.
A surface-gap plug
uses a completely different construction, with no side electrode at all.
An insulator fills the space between center electrode and shell. The
spark jumps from center electrode directly to the shell, taking any path
it chooses. These plugs are for motor-cycles with super-high-voltage
electronic ignition and should only be used where they were originally.
specified by the manufacturer.
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