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Fouled Plug Cause

Discussion in 'Early CJ5 and CJ6 Tech' started by DirtRoad61, May 7, 2020.

  1. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    F134. Started running rough last time I was out. Found #2 plug had melted. Any ideas for cause? Plugs were new last year.

    Recently had motor apart to hone cylinders and replace seals.

    #3
    #2
    #2
     
  2. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    Can you post picture of the spark plugs ?
     
  3. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    Better? First two from #2 cylinder. Last is from #3 cylinder. image000001_03.jpg
     
  4. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

  5. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

  6. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    On #2 I can't tell if that's carbon build up on the electrode or metal transfer.
    Looks like oil/carbon fouling to me.
    #3 looks normal burn, but gap appears too wide to my eye.
    Were the plug gaps proper on installation ? .030 if I recall ?

    How many miles on these plugs ?
     
  7. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    What motor oil are you using ?
     
  8. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    10-40

    Probably less than 1000 miles on plugs.

    Plugs looked good before last drive. Started acting up after 10 miles.
     
  9. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    So just hone and old pistons and rings ?
     
  10. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    Yes
     
  11. jpflat2a

    jpflat2a what's that noise?

    Well, I could say a lot, but I won't.
    There are a lot of could be this or could be that here....
    Process of elimination.
    I'd start with a wet/dry compression test, followed by a leakage test on all cylinders.
    If those are acceptable/within limits, then check for good spark.
    I'd then check to make sure fuel pump diaphragm isn't leaking raw gas into the engine oil, thinning it out.
    You could smell this in the oil on the dipstick.
    If okay, then just try straight 30 weight oil for giggles.
    Other than that, you could have blow by from the piston rings/cylinder wall conditions.

    You could have bad cylinder, valve guide or it could be this or could be that......

    Don't fret, others a lot better than me will chime in....
     
    wheelsontheroof likes this.
  12. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    I will test compression. Thanks.
     
  13. bigbendhiker

    bigbendhiker Member

    How old are those plugs? That's a lot of rust for plugs with only 1,000 miles. Has the engine been exposed to a lot of moisture?

     
  14. Glenn

    Glenn Kinda grumpy old man Staff Member

    Wow! What could cause an electrode to burn out like that?
     
  15. garage gnome

    garage gnome ECJ5 welder

    Some good info here.



    Know Your Engine - Read Your Spark Plugs
     
  16. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    That plug being burned out is incredible. Is your ignition timing correct?
     
  17. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    Plugs were new last year. The Jeep does sit outside under a cover.
     
  18. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    Not sure. There's no markings to check. I have had to keep turning it down from where PO had it.
     
  19. DirtRoad61

    DirtRoad61 Member

    I have only had the Jeep for a little over a year. It runs good but seems very low on power. Over the winter I pulled the motor just to clean it up and replace some leaking seals. While it was out I saw the cylinder walls looked like glass. A quick hone and put it back together.

    This is my first time into a motor. Any advice is greatly appreciated.

    Also while looking stuff up, I found that there are resistor and non resistor spark plugs. These are resistor type.
     
    Last edited: May 8, 2020
  20. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Any rational diagnosis cannot start until a tune up to FSM specs. Points, Timing, plug gap, etc.