And use wobble extensions. They are invaluable when you can't quite line up on the plug or the coil pack bolt.
I did the replacement today and everything went fine. It took about 2 hours altogether. It was nice out today so I wanted to get it done before it starts to be not nice (which it will shortly).
I was able to disconnect the wire from the air filter hose assembly and remove it completely. The is just a little quick connector there near the filter box.
I did the following.
1. disconnect the negative battery terminal
2. spray all the coil retaining bolts with PB (some were quite rusted).
3. remove the air filter hose assembly and set aside
4. confirm that I could loosen the coil retaining bolts
- as suggested, the wobble extensions were very helpful for some of these.
- a small flashlight was also very necessary
Once I was sure I could loosen all of the coils, I went ahead with the replacement.
5. pull each coil and boot
- I disconnected the wire after pulling the coil for most of them, it was hard to get the wire un-clipped before pulling the coil off of the plug.
- two of the boots came off and remained in the hole. These were removed with a pair of needle nose.
6. blow out each spark plug hole with an air compressor and vacuum
7. spray a small amount of PB into each spark plug hole
8. set a clicker to 20lb and use a spark plug socket and wobble extension to break each plug free.
- I stayed with 20lbs on the clicker because I wanted to be conservative. It was nice to have the longer handle as well. It took some effort with some of the plugs but the clicker never engaged.
Again, I made sure that all 8 plugs would break loose before completely removing any of them.
9. after breaking loose, turn each plug a 1/4 turn and spray some carb cleaner down around the socket.
10. remove each plug and discard.
Looking into each plug hole, There was still some carbon junk left after the plug was removed. I was concerned about this getting into the threads so I sprayed a bit more carb cleaner into each hole before installing the new plug. This cleaned thing up pretty well but I wouldn't want to over do it on this.
11. Remove the rubber retaining boot from the plug socket and install the new plugs.
- I was a bit concerned that I wouldn't get the socket off of the new plug and out of the hole if I left the retaining boot in the socket, not sure if this is a common problem or not.
- use just the plug socket and a straight extension (not wobble) to get the new plugs started. This was the hardest part in some ways. I tried to hold the extension very straight and turn it gently to let the threads catch. If I felt resistance, I backed the plug back out and tried again. Once the plug got started, I visually inspected to make sure the plug looked straight. I was careful to make sure that the plug would go all the way down without much resistance. I visually confirmed that the plug had seated all the way to the bottom of the hole. I found this to take about 15 turns.
13. set a clicker to 13lb and tighten each plug.
14. put a small amount of dielectric grease into the mouth of each coil boot
- I spread the grease around the inside edge with a small screwdriver. I wanted to make sure that the grease made a good seal around the entire boot. I kept the grease out of the center of the coil for the most part.
15. reinstall each boot, coil retention screw, and wire.
16. reconnect the battery
It started right up. It did run a bit rough for a second or so and I guess the it the carb cleaner and PB getting burnt out. It runs very nicely now as far as I can tell.
I used the Autolite XP104 plugs and have been happy with them. Only one plug came out of the box at .054, the rest were all over/under gapped, so not "pre-gapped" as stated on the box.
I didn't check the gap on the new plugs and this may have been a mistake. I used the same Autolite XP104 Iridium Plugs from RockAuto and assumed they would have the correct gap as indicated by the specs. I am a bit reluctant to pull them again to check. Is the fact that the engine is running well mean that the gaps are more or less correct? If the gaps are off, will that show up in the software if I connect my computer to the obd? In short, is it worth pulling the plugs to check even if the engine is running well?
I have been looking a bit for odb software that I can use to tune the engine. Most of the software documentation is a bit unclear as to if it can be used to do a tuneup or not. Is there something that users here would recommend for that?
LMHmedchem