jake_black94
Active LVC Member
When I had my '04 Mustang with the 4.6 2V, I had a plug blow out. Looked just like yours... I'll see if I can find the plug and post a pic of it.
Here's a photo of a Lincoln Navigator that had their plug loosen & blow out.
Look familiar?
Before we go condemning engines and expensive stuff, lets try to figure out what is actually wrong with the engine. I love it when we start assuming and throwing parts around here...
First off, we need to figure out if the rotating assembly is okay. I would get a longish 10" maybe 1/4" drive extension and stick it in that cylinder's spark plug hole. Turn the engine by hand and see if the extension moves up and down. Make sure if the piston travels down that you don't lose your extension in the hole.
If the cylinder is moving, you are somewhat out of trouble.
Next, we need to figure out why your spark plug is no longer in the hole. You sound like you have thread damage... I would get a tap that matches the spark plug threads and cover the thing in grease. Then try to thread it into the hole. See what happens. Either the plug was loose and worked its way out, or the plug pulled the threads out of the head. Ford and some aftermarket companies make a guard-cert kit (basically a heli-coil) to replace the cylinder head spark plug threads.
Get back to us once you figure out if the piston is still attached to the connecting rod.
Cripes. Do a compression check. If it's within 10-15 psi of the rest, the engine is fine. Fix the plug threads, change the gaskets, put in a new plug and coil and roll on....
I'm starting to feel a little better after seeing these pics. Didn't know this was common.
I was taught to never over-tighten the spark plugs and karma came back to bite me in the ass.
While I was driving back home, I would hear a knock or two, but maybe I was mistaking that for my custom exhaust hitting the floor board from the engine shaking, or perhaps worn out motor mounts.
We'll see what I find out tomorrow but am feeling a little more confident it's nothing serious.
96hotrodlincoln, I've been reading about that espensive time-sert kit doing the trick. If I need it, maybe I can show that I am trustworthy. I have 6k posts on svtperformance.com and I also sold my 98 Cobra on there without incident. And, I can show you my ebay feedback.
Holy smokes 6000 posts on SVT and you don't know about mod motors spitting out plugs? Common common
lol! To be fair, most of my posts were in the "hot girlfriends" thread or "hottest women" thread. Probably the two most popular threads that even different car forums flock to just to see them.![]()
Out of nowhere last night while I was idling at a traffic light, engine started missing. Didn't think much of it since another coil or plug went.
Bought a new set of plugs and one coil just in case and started working on the car tonight.
Low and behold, the plug at the back on the driver side must have been pushed out by the piston. I'm thinking a rod went. What pisses me off the most is that I baby the car most of the time.
When I crank the car, I don't even hear air hissing in and out of that plug hole either, so that piston must be stationary.
Now I have no idea WTF I am going to do. The car will still run but it's no good for commuting. It could cost thousands just to get another engine in there.
For the short term, I will need to get my TBird out of storage, pay a mechanic to replace the trans tail shaft gasket (leaking like crazy) and use that car fulltime while I figure out what I will do with this car..
![]()
hey guys, so the NAPA store, a brief walk from my apartment, has a few "thread chasers" in stock and was thinking about buying one. What do you think of these:
(I'm a little unclear about "thread size" and these two are different)
[url]http://www.napaonline.com/Catalog/CatalogItemDetail.aspx?R=SER3688_0006401120[/URL]
[url]http://www.napaonline.com/Catalog/CatalogItemDetail.aspx?R=SER3545_0006401120[/URL]
You need to see if you can get a look at your threads and see if there are any usable threads left. There isn't very many threads to begin with, simply because of the thickness of the head at the plug holes. Always use anti-seize on our plugs.
I would think that if you had a plug thread that was a little bent/crossed, that chaser tool would help straighten it out, but if they're damaged enough to let the plug shoot out, I'd say they're ruined.
The local dealership quoted me $300 to heli-coil mine and they couldn't guarantee that would hold, so for the same amount of money, I bought the timesert kit and did the repair myself. I have since sold the car and everything was just fine after the repair. The hardest part was getting shavings out of the cylinder after the repair was finished.
http://www.lincolnvscadillac.com/showthread.php?t=21100&highlight=timesert
FWIW....I feel your pain O.P.