- 257
- 74
- 28
- Location
- Culleoka, TN
So last month finally got to my 1986 M1009 "tan" I acquired from Illinois last year.
Bought it with the radiator stolen, all battery cables cut and stolen, batteries stolen and a few broke out windows.
Get it rewired and was hard to start, but started after years of sitting in the PO's lot.
I go to change out the glow plugs and all 8 had swollen tips (Autolite brand - AVOID...!!!).
Did not have the glow plug extractor tool and had to break off two of them on the passenger side. I've done plenty of change-outs and always got the broke off tips by bending them and pulling from the injector port with forceps. I bent #2 glow plug tip (I "thought") and went to fish it out. I could not find it. Go to #6 tip, push it into the pre-combustion chamber and extract it (thinking "maybe I don't really need to bend them to extract"...). Look under the CUCV, around it and inside #2 injector port - still can't find the tip...
I think, "naw, it didn't fall into the cylinder - or did it?" I put a ratchet on the crankshaft pulley bolt and sure enough the engine "stopped" during rotation. Damn...!!! Reverse direction a bit and try again - engine stopped at same location...
At this point and not owning a bore scope, I determined that the head had to come off...
So off with the cylinder head it goes and laying on top of the piston was the broken tip... I was p#ssed, but glad I didn't try to start it to "blow" it out the exhaust like I read on the 'net... I don't think the starter would have overcame the obstructing tip and would have either embedded itself into the piston or got lodged in a valve if it did start...
I learned some valuable lessons:
1. A glow plug tip CAN fall into the cylinder even if "swollen"... (there's actually enough opening for two tips side by side as the picture shows).
2. Before breaking off a tip, put cotton, toilet paper, paper towel, something below the glow plug tip to cover that damn
pre-combustion slot so nothing falls thru it...
3. Buy the swollen tip removal tool...
Hope this helps someone in the future...!!!
Bought it with the radiator stolen, all battery cables cut and stolen, batteries stolen and a few broke out windows.
Get it rewired and was hard to start, but started after years of sitting in the PO's lot.
I go to change out the glow plugs and all 8 had swollen tips (Autolite brand - AVOID...!!!).
Did not have the glow plug extractor tool and had to break off two of them on the passenger side. I've done plenty of change-outs and always got the broke off tips by bending them and pulling from the injector port with forceps. I bent #2 glow plug tip (I "thought") and went to fish it out. I could not find it. Go to #6 tip, push it into the pre-combustion chamber and extract it (thinking "maybe I don't really need to bend them to extract"...). Look under the CUCV, around it and inside #2 injector port - still can't find the tip...
I think, "naw, it didn't fall into the cylinder - or did it?" I put a ratchet on the crankshaft pulley bolt and sure enough the engine "stopped" during rotation. Damn...!!! Reverse direction a bit and try again - engine stopped at same location...
At this point and not owning a bore scope, I determined that the head had to come off...
So off with the cylinder head it goes and laying on top of the piston was the broken tip... I was p#ssed, but glad I didn't try to start it to "blow" it out the exhaust like I read on the 'net... I don't think the starter would have overcame the obstructing tip and would have either embedded itself into the piston or got lodged in a valve if it did start...
I learned some valuable lessons:
1. A glow plug tip CAN fall into the cylinder even if "swollen"... (there's actually enough opening for two tips side by side as the picture shows).
2. Before breaking off a tip, put cotton, toilet paper, paper towel, something below the glow plug tip to cover that damn
pre-combustion slot so nothing falls thru it...
3. Buy the swollen tip removal tool...
Hope this helps someone in the future...!!!
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