I know, whoop-de-doo. Should be a relative piece o' cake. And the right side was. I know I probably didn't have to remove the cover, but I did for slightly easier access. Start to finish took maybe ten minutes. Move to the left side. More of a pain to remove the cover, but then the real fun began. I lowered the socket into the hole and it wouldn't grab the plug. Try again. Nope. Try the socket from the tool kit. Nope. So I grabbed a flashlight and took a look inside and saw what looked like a rubber ring in the hole, encircling the ceramic part of the plug.
I'm sure most of you are way ahead of me on this. I looked at the end of the spark plug wire and it was missing that fat part at the end. Sure enough, that's what was stuck in the cylinder head, blocking access to the plug itself. After spending a lot of time and inventing new curse words, I was finally able to remove it and put it back on the wire, insert the new plug, futz around lining up the not-so-easy-to-access screws for the cover and button everything up. Grabbed the key, crossed my fingers and it started right up and sounds just wonderful.
It's things like this that are the reason I lean toward having someone else do work on the bike.
Replaced spark plugs today.
- DonGee
- Studying MC Handbook
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:50 am
- My Bike: 2005 Boulevard S50
- Location: MA, about halfway between Boston and Cape Cod
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- Joined a 1100cc Club
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Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
Never fear, pay attention to detail, and all jobs are relatively straightforward.
I know of a guy who changed his oil filter, but neglected to clean the mating surface, which had the old o-ring stuck on it.
Jammed the new filter on...leaks ensued.
I know of a guy who changed his oil filter, but neglected to clean the mating surface, which had the old o-ring stuck on it.
Jammed the new filter on...leaks ensued.
- sgtcall
- LICENSE SUSPENDED!
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- Joined: Sun Apr 03, 2016 5:59 pm
- My Bike: Triumph Bonneville Speedmaster
- Location: Stranded in New Jersey
Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
Grabed these one day a harbor freight just because I figured they were something I could destroy if needed. Now I have 4 or 5 sets and keep them in the tool box, gun bag, basement, and shed just because they come in handy all the time. I have a better set made by Irwin (I think) but these little ones from harbor freight make some things much easier.
If you have any type of electrical issue, have your battery load tested before you do anything else. Any auto parts store will test it for free.
- Herb
- Joined a 1200cc Club
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- My Bike: 1999 1400 intruder
Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
That little hook and pick set has been a lifesaver more times than I can count.
I also have more than one set.
I also have more than one set.
I can't seem to win the lottery. I think I have used up all of my good luck riding motorcycles.
- hillsy v2
- Bike out of hock
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Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
If you've never done that you're either lying or just don't do enough oil changes.
Mine was on the old CRV we had. You only ever do it once though.
- sgtcall
- LICENSE SUSPENDED!
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- Joined: Sun Apr 03, 2016 5:59 pm
- My Bike: Triumph Bonneville Speedmaster
- Location: Stranded in New Jersey
Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
It's almost strange that the big tool brands don't sell a small set like the HF ones. Even as a advertising gimic like the SnapOn pocket screwdriver.
If you have any type of electrical issue, have your battery load tested before you do anything else. Any auto parts store will test it for free.
- DonGee
- Studying MC Handbook
- Posts: 69
- Joined: Mon Oct 26, 2020 5:50 am
- My Bike: 2005 Boulevard S50
- Location: MA, about halfway between Boston and Cape Cod
Re: Replaced spark plugs today.
That pick and hook set is exactly what I ended up using to get that thing out!