--
Charles Packer
http://cpacker.org/whatnews
mail
If you're lucky, it means the gasket on the bottom of the spark plug
wasn't quite seated correctly, or some oil spilled on it while you were
adding/changing oil.
If you're not lucky, it means the rings are going and a rebuild might soon
be in order.
Let me clarify: the oil didn't come up from where
the spark plug sits at the bottom of its well. That is,
it didn't leak from around the spark plug gasket. It came
from _above_ the spark plug, at the top of its well
where it meets with the piece of metal that is
bolted in place over the cylinders. (It's called
the valve cover, I think.)
--
Charles Packer
http://cpacker.org/whatnews
mailboxATcpacker.org
>On Nov 1, 9:45 pm, Hachiroku ???? <Tru...@e86.GTS> wrote:
> > If you're lucky, it means the gasket on the bottom of the spark
>plug
>> wasn't quite seated correctly, or some oil spilled on it while you were
>> adding/changing oil.
>>
>> If you're not lucky, it means the rings are going and a rebuild might soon
>> be in order.
>
>Let me clarify: the oil didn't come up from where
>the spark plug sits at the bottom of its well. That is,
>it didn't leak from around the spark plug gasket. It came
>from _above_ the spark plug, at the top of its well
>where it meets with the piece of metal that is
>bolted in place over the cylinders. (It's called
>the valve cover, I think.)
You need to replace the valve cover gaskets. The seal around the spark
plug well is leaking. This is not that big a deal and the parts aren't
that expensive. It's a driveway DIY if you have the tools and
mechanical ability, otherwise it's couple of hours labor at a shop.
> On Nov 1, 9:45 pm, Hachiroku �ϥ��? <Tru...@e86.GTS> wrote:
> > If you're lucky, it means the gasket on the bottom of the spark
> plug
>> wasn't quite seated correctly, or some oil spilled on it while you were
>> adding/changing oil.
>>
>> If you're not lucky, it means the rings are going and a rebuild might soon
>> be in order.
>
> Let me clarify: the oil didn't come up from where
> the spark plug sits at the bottom of its well. That is,
> it didn't leak from around the spark plug gasket. It came
> from _above_ the spark plug, at the top of its well
> where it meets with the piece of metal that is
> bolted in place over the cylinders. (It's called
> the valve cover, I think.)
I had oil discovered in spark plug wells and was told I needed a new
valve cover gasket to correct it.
Then again, this particular mechanic turned out to be less than
honest, so take this with a grain of salt.
--
Todd H.
2001 Legacy Outback Wagon, 2.5L H-4
Chicago, Illinois USA
OK! See Mulder's comment.
I did this only on an '88 Supra, and that was a chore only because the
intake (air) runs over the top of the valve covers...you have to remove
all the air passages to get to them.
This should be a piece of cake.
I replaced my spark plugs and found oil in the same place a long time
ago. It might have been at 100k kms or 150k kms. I have a 2003 OBS.
I never did anything about it, and the next time I replaced the plugs,
no oil.
I'm due for another spark plug change so I'll post my results.
Chicobiker
I'm tempted to do as you did and just replace
the plugs. It just occurred to me -- duh -- that I
can at least pull the plug connectors of all four
plugs far enough out to inspect the situation without
removing all that other harware that you have to
remove to do a complete plug job.
At any rate, somebody sent me this page that has
well-photographed instructions for the job:
http://tinyurl.com/yaga5uc
--
Charles Packer
http://cpacker.org/whatnews
mailboxATcpacker.org