Today's glow plugs, whether it be brand
x or y they are all well made products, and they should give you good service.
Although the life of a glow plug is unpredictable, you should reasonably expect
a dozen or more runs out of one. If you have a motor which seems to eat glow
plugs, the probability is that it is suffering from one of the following three
causes.
Overheating
A glow plug coil will melt if it gets
too hot. Reasons why this happens vary. Sometimes the combination of running a
motor wide open with a lean setting before you take the glow plug heater off is
too much for the element. When a glow plug fails due to overheating, the end of
the element wire has a tear drop shape. Unless you have very unusual eyes, you
cannot detect this without the aid of a microscope or magnifying glass.
Vibration
If the engine is not rigidly mounted and
can move around very much, the element is shaken from side to side with
tremendous "G" forces. This literally fatigues the metal until it
breaks. The only solution is to increase the rigidity of your engine mount.
Shock Wave
Most model engines use a steel or brass
liner mounted on top of a cast aluminum case. As the engine gets older, the
liner flange works its way down into the case and lowers the head with it. When
the piston clearance gets down to about .010, air is forced out of the squish
band area with supersonic velocity and the action on the glow plug element is
like when a jet plane zooms over your house and knocks out the windows. The
cure here is to raise the head with another head gasket.
Less often, reasons why glow plugs
sometimes fail are:
Cranking the engine when it is flooded.
This sprays raw fuel onto the plug and the droplets beat the element over to
the side of the housing where it shorts out.
Another problem that occasionally occurs
is that motors sometime take to wearing abnormally, such as a cracked
crankshaft chewing metal out of the bearing, or a connecting rod that is chewing
metal. Of course, when this metal goes up and deposits on the plug element, the
plug burns out.
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