nu-supercrew nu-supercrew is offline

Technical Article Contributor

About Me

Statistics

Total Posts
Albums
Visitor Messages
Total Likes
General Information
  • Last Activity: 01-10-2023 07:36 PM
  • Join Date: 04-14-2005

Friends

Showing Friends 1 to 3 of 3

Visitor Messages

Showing Visitor Messages 1 to 6 of 6
  1. Remingtonry
    07-12-2012 04:06 PM
    Thank you for the TOTM vote, I really appreciate it!
  2. nu-supercrew
  3. beechkid
    04-01-2012 11:20 AM
    Hi NS!

    To avoid a thread war, I am sending this to PM...
    When I decided it was time to change the plugs (2006 Mark LT 4x2, 5.4, 35,000 miles). Although I did following the most recent TSB, I also relied on my experience back in the 1970’s when aluminum heads & intake manifolds were just entering the street scene and never-seize did not exist. Here are the exceptions to the TSB that I did…
    1. I ran Lucas fuel injection cleaner, mixed at 3 times their recommendation in 1 full tank of gasoline. Purpose…if I was lucky, it would dissolve or loosen any carbon buildup (although many do a real fuel injection cleaning also- and it is probably a best practice to do if you have more than 45-50,000 miles on the plugs)
    2. Although I am a fan of PB Blaster, I used a product called ChemSearch “Yield”. The issue I have with using carb cleaner is the lack of lubrication…..in the old days of removing steel plugs from aluminum heads, we use to mix up acetone & ATF…or of we needed more lubrication, kerosene & ATF, “Yield” provides this lubrication- much better IMHO than even PB Blaster.
    3. Yes, I put anti-seize on the plug threads (I know the TSB says not to)
    4. Of course…a lot of patience, I really doubt if I ever put more than 20-25 lbs of force during removal (purposefully)
    The end result, only one plug even “squeaked” coming out (but it basically unscrewed like a regular plug- literally). Plug #4 was initially a little stubborn, but after the second try, then waiting about 30 minutes, it came out with very little effort…just kept wiggling the plugs (tightening/loosening) by 1/8th or even less of a turn- and they all came out without a single one breaking or any issue really. Another technique that can definitely be used is to loosen the plugs about 1/8 to ¼ of a turn, start the engine for about 1 minute- this allows the flame to travel up around the plug to burn off the carbon, let cool, then remove with the process I previously described.
    Actual working time: 2 hours…..including washing my hands, total time was 5 hours.
  4. swaz589
    01-22-2010 11:20 PM
    Let me know the price including shipping to zip code 07644 if you can...and what payment options you would accept. Id prefer an email with the address i can send payment to, if youd like it to be a money order. Thanks
  5. swaz589
    01-20-2010 01:18 PM
    Id like to know if the scangauge II is still for sale?
  6. brownchristian
    02-05-2009 09:40 PM
    I am having the same raw gas smell you had. Did you ever determine the problem?

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:20 AM.