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6.5 diesel glow plug STUCK!!
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6.5 diesel glow plug STUCK!!
swapped out my glow plugs today and one of them is swelled up inside and i cant remove it, i can unscrew it all the way then it moves a bit but wont come out, any ideas on how to do it without pulling the head off?
Get out there!!
Re: 6.5 diesel glow plug STUCK!!
spoken with Brunswick?Wozza244 wrote:swapped out my glow plugs today and one of them is swelled up inside and i cant remove it, i can unscrew it all the way then it moves a bit but wont come out, any ideas on how to do it without pulling the head off?
Re: 6.5 diesel glow plug STUCK!!
Not yet, this sort of thing happens with any diesel engine when piss poor quality glow plugs have been installed.bogged wrote:spoken with Brunswick?
Hoping it has happened to someone else so they could maybe shed some light on an easy extraction, if not it stops in there till i get around to pulling it off the road and whacking new heads on it. The job is on the list.
Get out there!!
you could leave it there and just start on 7 cylinders, it will kick in after about 2 seconds.
DISCLAIMER: all care no responsibility - if you try this and it breaks, you're on your own.
unscrew it all the way then attach a cordless drill to the sticking out bit. give it a slow gentle spin and squirt some inox or similar down the hole and tug gently as you spin.
it will have some sooty deposits etc on it stopping the tip coming up through the quite narrow hole into the precombustion chamber.
I have used this method several times on japanese engines but never on a chev.
DISCLAIMER: all care no responsibility - if you try this and it breaks, you're on your own.
unscrew it all the way then attach a cordless drill to the sticking out bit. give it a slow gentle spin and squirt some inox or similar down the hole and tug gently as you spin.
it will have some sooty deposits etc on it stopping the tip coming up through the quite narrow hole into the precombustion chamber.
I have used this method several times on japanese engines but never on a chev.
Free air locker to the first 20 callers!
Yes, tried the inox, tried it hot, tried letting it cool, in the end i have decided to just leave it be, because if i break it off in the pre com chamber i will be major upset.dumbdunce wrote:you could leave it there and just start on 7 cylinders, it will kick in after about 2 seconds.
DISCLAIMER: all care no responsibility - if you try this and it breaks, you're on your own.
unscrew it all the way then attach a cordless drill to the sticking out bit. give it a slow gentle spin and squirt some inox or similar down the hole and tug gently as you spin.
it will have some sooty deposits etc on it stopping the tip coming up through the quite narrow hole into the precombustion chamber.
I have used this method several times on japanese engines but never on a chev.
The heads are coming off at some stage of the year anyhow
Thanks for the help mate, appreciated.
Get out there!!
It is most likely melted from glowing too long ,quite common with low Volt glow plugs in the Chevs.... do you have a glow plug timer ..
If you are in a warm climate i would run off 7 plugs till you need to do head work
Leave that plug disconected...
If you are in a warm climate i would run off 7 plugs till you need to do head work
Leave that plug disconected...
[url=http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/PHP_Modules/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=40976]ToyTruck[/url] is GONE ..... Time to build a BUGGY
From memory , there is / was 2 different sets of glow plugs available .
1 set / type have a really LOW Voltage rating (my memory says it was something like 6 or 8 Volts)
I have no idea why , but i think it was to make them get hot real quick.
The down side was that if you glowed them manually OR incorrect timer setting , they would overheat and "mushroom" the head of the glow plug.
The other type (later model) was rated to 12 Volts and realistically you could run them all day long with out them failing / mushrooming.
I have heard of a few cases of "manual" glow plug setups that glowed them too long and melted / mushroomed all 8 :(
1 set / type have a really LOW Voltage rating (my memory says it was something like 6 or 8 Volts)
I have no idea why , but i think it was to make them get hot real quick.
The down side was that if you glowed them manually OR incorrect timer setting , they would overheat and "mushroom" the head of the glow plug.
The other type (later model) was rated to 12 Volts and realistically you could run them all day long with out them failing / mushrooming.
I have heard of a few cases of "manual" glow plug setups that glowed them too long and melted / mushroomed all 8 :(
[url=http://www.outerlimits4x4.com/PHP_Modules/phpBB2/viewtopic.php?t=40976]ToyTruck[/url] is GONE ..... Time to build a BUGGY
This is a common problem with chev V8 diesels, caused by either cheap glowplugs or usually the timer/operator has glowed them too long and they have swelled/burnt out.
There is a special tool which pulls them out every time, costs about $70 on ebay. See auction 140384688274 on ebay.com
I've used mine a couple of times but fiends have used it more ;-))
If you are intending to pull the heads in the near future then it will start fine with just seven glowplugs. The problem is though that as you "lose" glowplugs the available current to the rest increases increasing the chances of burning more out.
If you break a tip off in the cylinder when trying to extract one then just pull the glowplug out of that cylinder and suck the bits out with either a magnet or a vacuum cleaner.
Once you get the glowplug controller replaced they will last for years.
There is a special tool which pulls them out every time, costs about $70 on ebay. See auction 140384688274 on ebay.com
I've used mine a couple of times but fiends have used it more ;-))
If you are intending to pull the heads in the near future then it will start fine with just seven glowplugs. The problem is though that as you "lose" glowplugs the available current to the rest increases increasing the chances of burning more out.
If you break a tip off in the cylinder when trying to extract one then just pull the glowplug out of that cylinder and suck the bits out with either a magnet or a vacuum cleaner.
Once you get the glowplug controller replaced they will last for years.
Peter
Dungog NSW
M1026 Humvee , Oka Camper
Dungog NSW
M1026 Humvee , Oka Camper
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