I think spark plug is M14x1.25mm Helicoil kits are not so expensive on ebay from £11 with drill and tap and tool, probably poor quality so maybe pick a better one to budget.
Never done a spark plug but I did my sump plug and it's not too hard.
you can grease the drill and tap to catch most of the swarf but I guess straight access to drill the hole is the problem with spark plugs.
You only get one chance at this, so mis information could be costly.
Personally I would buy the best and get somebody to take the responsibility of fitting it with a guarantee in case of failure.
My local tame T25 friendly Garage did exactly this on our Tin=Tops engine a couple of years ago. They were very "Yeh, don't worry, piece of pizz for us" = I was not so confident, but £50 later = job done and no problems since (including more than one"spark plug out and back in" scenario).
Thanks for all your suggestions. I will try the temporary fix and start hunting around for a garage who can, ideally (from looking at the video) time-sert, if not helicoil, a new thread.
I'll keep you updated.
"our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt" Mr W Shakespeare
1990 VW T25 Transporter
1.9 DG 78ps
LPG'd by Gasure
Depending on how much access you can make for yourself, and hoping that there is still some thread metal left in the spark plug hole.....
The proper way to do this is to helicoil it with genuine helicoils. I have the tooling for this, and would do it by post, or you can get an engineering shop locally....don't forget that once you have gone this far you might as well get both heads off, 4 helicoils, fit new valve guides, exhaust valves, and valve stem oil seals. Bits are not dear, but there is a fair bit of work.
Now for the 'get you out of the sh*t solution.
Take an old spark plug of the right length and remove the electrode. Now cut vertically down with a hacksaw or a 1.6 mm stainless cutting disc, offset to avoid the central electrode, two thirds of the way down through the thread. Blow clean with compressed air, and make sure there are no loose bits of ceramic. The idea is to rethread this plug into the damaged hole with a '2 steps forward 1 step back, movement. If you have fine valve grinding paste put some on the cut plug thread , this will help.
Wind the plug out, clean the thread with thinners on a cotton bud, blow everything clean with compressed air.
Now try the new plug. It would be a good idea to know how many turns needed to lock the thread. If the plug nips up ok, then wind it back out, use a smear of copperslip grease and Hey Presto.
A straight bit of rubber tube/hose over the end of the plug can be helpful to get it started in the thread.
If the plug still feels rocky, then use Bearing locking compound. I use BERNER HBL 60, in a little yellow bottle. Clean everything with acetone, apply product, and put plug straight in. This product WILL destroy what's left of your thread when you take the plug out, so now you know how long you've got before dropping the heads.
As far as I can tell, it's only really the centre of the thread that's gone. If you were very careful and greased the male thread of the spark plug, could you put a little JB Weld on the affected female thread of the engine and using the greased male thread, gradually create a new groove?
That's probably an awful idea, right?
"our doubts are traitors, and make us lose the good we oft might win, by fearing to attempt" Mr W Shakespeare
1990 VW T25 Transporter
1.9 DG 78ps
LPG'd by Gasure
itchyfeet wrote:
you can grease the drill and tap to catch most of the swarf but I guess straight access to drill the hole is the problem with spark plugs.
You could always turn the van upside down
Single cab pickup, running 1996 Subaru WRX STI engine, Aiden talbot gearbox.
jamesandtheopenroad wrote:Was thinking about it in the bus.
As far as I can tell, it's only really the centre of the thread that's gone. If you were very careful and greased the male thread of the spark plug, could you put a little JB Weld on the affected female thread of the engine and using the greased male thread, gradually create a new groove?
That's probably an awful idea, right?
Let's just embrace the concept of a helicoil shall we
Ian
The Hulley's Bus 1989 2.1DJ Trampspotter LPG courtesy of Steve @ Gasure