




Spark plugs that haven't been
changed for a long time can become one with the cylinder head. Fortunately,
it's possible to repair damaged threads instead of scrapping the head.
(Photograph by Chris Eckert / Studio D)
Q: Yesterday I was driving home and a spark
plug blew right out of the cylinder head. The car was towed to the shop where
I'd had a tuneup the day before — which included changing the spark plugs. The
mechanic said he could repair the threads, but my uncle says the cylinder head
is ruined and the mechanic should replace it at his expense. The car has about
100,000 miles. Thoughts?
A: There are a number of ways to
repair stripped threads. In fact, it may be possible to simply chase the old
threads with a tap and clean them up. Or, as illustrated, you can insert a
Helicoil. There are several types of repair inserts, but we prefer Helicoils.
I'd give your mechanic a shot at fixing the threads before I held his feet to
the fire. When a spark plug has had a chance to marry a cylinder head for
100,000 miles, it's not uncommon for the aluminum threads to come out of the
head with the plug. (I pull and inspect plugs every couple of years and
reinstall them with a small dab of antiseize compound, but that's another
column.)
A proper thread repair should last as long as the life of the car. This type of
repair can be used for almost any threaded fastener, by the way. And that
includes cast-iron, steel and aluminum parts. Warning: Installing a Helicoil or
other threaded insert looks simple — but it's not. Any readers out there who
wish to attempt it might want to practice a couple of times on scrap parts.
Start by threading the special Helicoil tap into the remaining threads in the
head. This is to ensure the new threads are concentric and parallel with the
originals. Continue threading the tap in to cut the new, oversize threads. To
avoid getting aluminum chips in the cylinder when retapping the threads, you
should coat the tap with grease. The chips will stick to the grease and come
back out with the tap. Back out the chip-laden tap, and clean up any remaining
chips.
I've also filled the cylinder (before tapping the hole) with oil-soaked
clothesline to catch any chips — but that was in a racing engine with a squish
band only a few thousandths of an inch deep. Street engines with a more normal
compression ratio should be fine if you are careful, and blow the chips out
with compressed air. Mostly, you don't want any chips to find their way out the
exhaust port and wind up in the catalytic converter.
Now you can thread the appropriate-length coil over the installation mandrel.
There's a raised flat on the mandrel that will catch on the tang in the coil,
allowing you to thread the coil into your new threads. The coil is a little bit
bigger than the threads, which will keep it in place when you're finished. The
tang will pull the coil into place from the inner end. Once the coil is in
place, remove the mandrel.
Now, use a pair of needle-nose pliers to break the tang off. It's prescored to
break off cleanly and easily. Do NOT drop the tang into the cylinder! A few
aluminum chips will not damage your engine, but a 1/2-in.-long piece of sharp
stainless steel wire will tattoo the top of your piston and the combustion
chamber before it finally gets out past the exhaust valve.