Notices
Series II Technical and Trouble shooting Discuss technical details for the Series II RX-8 and any issues or problems you are facing

Plug change @ 102k

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Rate Thread
 
Old 03-08-2014 | 12:40 PM
  #1  
Beefy98's Avatar
Thread Starter
Registered
 
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 224
Likes: 0
Plug change @ 102k

after 30k on these plug they looked about as good as can be. There was a bit of oil on the rear trailing ones threads and another had a bit of green on the tab and a bit on the circumference. what is that?

BTW, change the plugs when HOT. Broke free instantly.
Old 03-09-2014 | 03:18 AM
  #2  
jasonrxeight's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Jan 2010
Posts: 3,487
Likes: 3
From: Omaha, NE
Originally Posted by Beefy98
after 30k on these plug they looked about as good as can be. There was a bit of oil on the rear trailing ones threads and another had a bit of green on the tab and a bit on the circumference. what is that?

BTW, change the plugs when HOT. Broke free instantly.
I would not change plug when hot. you taking threads with the plug cuz the metal is soft. besides expansion of metal makes it even worse.
Old 03-20-2014 | 10:57 AM
  #3  
Beefy98's Avatar
Thread Starter
Registered
 
Joined: Jul 2010
Posts: 224
Likes: 0
I have always changed the plugs hot on all cars and have never had a problem breaking them free and have never damaged anything. The one time I tried it cold--3 weeks ago on the 8--I could not budge them, and, had I stayed on it, would have definitely broken something.
Old 03-26-2014 | 01:02 PM
  #4  
liondogs's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Jan 2002
Posts: 63
Likes: 0
From: Stanwood, Washington
Anti seize stuff on the plug threads before you install them helps a lot when removing them years later.
Old 03-29-2014 | 03:13 AM
  #5  
fyrstormer's Avatar
2009 RX-8 Touring
 
Joined: Oct 2009
Posts: 574
Likes: 6
From: Manassas, VA USA
The plugs shouldn't stay in there long enough to seize. However, a drop of motor oil on each of the threads should work fine.

I've never paid much attention to engine temperature when changing sparkplugs. I've also never had trouble removing them. I had to put about 50lb-ft on one of them to break it loose, once, but it did break loose. If you're not using a long-handle torque wrench when tightening anything to spec, or when loosening anything that was tightened to spec, you're doing it wrong. The torque wrench will tell you if something is seized -- your muscles are not a reliable indicator.

The sparkplug shell is galvanized steel, and the engine block is aluminum. Those two metals almost never seize together, especially if the threads are oiled.
Old 06-30-2014 | 07:21 PM
  #6  
noredline's Avatar
Registered
 
Joined: Mar 2014
Posts: 48
Likes: 1
Make sure your using a wobble fitting when wrenching on RX8 spark plugs, the bottom rear wont fit just right if using a straight extension. Good chance you will slip and crack the insulator.
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
05TR1CH
New Member Forum
14
04-18-2023 05:56 AM
uZu
New Member Forum
13
12-30-2015 01:35 PM
Prophet
Series I Trouble Shooting
13
09-04-2015 12:03 PM
T_Mags
New Member Forum
5
09-03-2015 12:40 PM
MarkX
New Member Forum
3
07-31-2015 08:50 AM



You have already rated this thread Rating: Thread Rating: 0 votes,  average.

Quick Reply: Plug change @ 102k



All times are GMT -5. The time now is 11:40 AM.