CTAO.info - Car Technical Assistance Online


Car Technical Assistance Online header image 2

Spark plug wear patterns

February 14th, 2008 · No Comments

Below are pictures that explain different wear patterns that spark plugs can experience in an internal combustion engine. Most of us will experience reduced performance with our cars before we ever see wear as severe as shown.

Different wear patterns of the spark plug

 

1. Normal condition

Insulator nose grayish-white or grayish-yellow to brown. Engine is in order. Heat range of plug correct.Mixture setting and ignition timing are correct, nu misfiring, cold starting device functioning. No deposits from fuel additives containing lead or from alloying constituents in the engine oil. No overheating.

spark_plug_1.jpg

2. Sooted - Carbon fouled

Insulator nodes, electrodes and spark plug shell covered with velvet like dull black soot deposits.
Cause: Incorrect mixture setting (carburetor, fuel injection), mixture too rich, air filter very dirty, automatic choke not in order or manual choke pulled too long, mainly short-distance driving, spark plug too cold, heat-range code number too low.
Effects: Misfiring, difficult cold starting.
Remedy: Adjust A/F mixture and choke device, check air filter.

spark_plug_2.jpg
3. Oil fouled

Insulator nose, electrodes and spark plug shell covered with shiny soot or carbon residues.
Cause: Too much oil in combustion chamber.Oil level too high, badly worn piston rings, cylinders and valve guides. In two-stroke engines, too much oil in mixture.
Effects: Misfiring, difficult starting.
Remedy: Overhaul engine, adjust oil/fuel ratio (2-stroke engines), fit new spark plugs.

spark_plug_3.jpg
4. Lead fouling

Insulator nose covered in places with brown/yellow glazing, which can have a greenish color.
Cause: Lead additives in fuel. Glazing results from high engine loading after extended part-load operation.
Effects: At high loads, the glazing becomes conductive and causes misfiring.
Remedy: Fit new spark plugs since cleaning the old ones is pointless.

spark_plug_4.jpg
5. Pronunced lead fouling

Insulator nose covered in places with thick brown/yellow glazing, which can have a greenish color.
Cause: Lead additives in fuel. Glazing results from high engine loading after extended part-load operation.
Effects: At high loads, the glazing becomes conductive and causes misfiring.
Remedy: Fit new spark plugs since cleaning the old ones is pointless.

spark_plug_5.jpg
6. Formation of ash

Heavy ash deposits on the insulator nose resulting from oil and fuel additives, in the scavening area and on the ground electrode. The structure of the ash is loose to cinder-like.
Cause: Alloying constitutes, particulary from engine oil, can deposit this ash in the combustion chamber and on the spark-plug face.
Effects: Can lead to auto-ignition with loss of power and possible engine damage.
Remedy: Repair the engine. Fit new spark plugs. Possibly change the engine oil type.

spark_plug_6.jpg
7. Center electrode coverd with melted deposits

Melted deposits on center electrode. Insulator tip blistered, spongy and soft.
Cause: Overheating caused by auto-ignition. For instance, due to ignition being too far advanced, combustion deposits in the combustion chamber, defective values, defective ignition distributor, poor-quality fuel. Possibly spark-plug heat-range value is too low.
Effects: Misfiring, loss of power (engine damage).
Remedy: Check the engine, ignition and mixture-formation system. Fit new spark plugs with correct heat-range code number.

spark_plug_7.jpg
8.Partially melted center electrode

Center electrode has melted and ground electrode is severely damaged.
Cause: Overheating caused by auto-ignition. For instance, due to ignition being too far advanced, combustion deposits in the combustion chamber, defective values, defective ignition distributor, poor-quality fuel.
Effects: Misfiring, loss of power (engine damage). Insulator-nose fracture, possibly due to overheated center electrode.
Remedy: Check the engine, ignition and mixture-formation system. Fit new spark plugs with correct heat-range code number.

spark_plug_8.jpg
9. Partially melted electrodes

Cauliflower like appearance of the electrodes. Possible deposit of materials not originating from the spark plug.
Cause: Overheating caused by auto-ignition. For instance, due to ignition being too far advanced, combustion deposits in the combustion chamber, defective values, defective ignition distributor, poor-quality fuel.
Effects: Power loss becomes noticeable before total failure occurs (engine damage)
Remedy: Check the engine and mixture-formation system. Fit new spark plugs.

spark_plug_9.jpg
10. Heavy wear on center electrode

Cause: Spark plug exchange interval has been exceeded.
Effects: Misfiring, particularly during acceleration (ignition voltage no longer sufficient for the large electrode gap). Poor starting.
Remedy: Fit new spark plugs.

spark_plug_10.jpg
11. Heavy wear on ground electrode

Cause: Aggressive fuel and oil additives. Unfavorable flow conditions in combustion chamber, possibly as a result of combustion deposits. Engine knock. Overheating has not taken place.
Effects: Misfiring, particularly during acceleration. Poor starting.
Remedy: Fit new spark plugs.

spark_plug_11.jpg
12. Insulator nose fracture

Cause: Mechanical damage (spark plug has been dropped or bad handling has put pressure on the center electrode). In exceptional cases, deposits between the insulator nose and the center electrode, as well as the center-electrode corrosion, can cause the insulator nose to fracture.
Effects: Misfiring, spark arcs-over at a point that is inaccessible for the fresh charge of A/F mixture.
Remedy: Fit new spark plugs.

spark_plug_12.jpg

Tags: Engine and Components · Service and Maintenance


 

0 responses so far ↓

  • There are no comments yet...Kick things off by filling out the form below.

Leave a Comment

Valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional