Hey guys,
yesterday I made an attempt at changing the spark plugs on my mom's '08 Chrysler Sebring with the 2.7l V6. The front three are easy as could be, simply take off the engine cover and there they are just sitting there. The back three are a different story, in order to get to them you need to take off the intake manifold, that was the problem I encountered. All bolts were removed everything disconnected and the thing wouldn't budge, I heard it creek twice so I stopped. Not my car, not going to be responsible for any damage. I showed my mom why I was stopping and she agreed, I took off the coil on one of the front plugs to show her how unbelievable easy they are to get to compared to the rear. I bolted the intake manifold back on and connected everything again. Turned her on and took her for a one mile drive around the neighborhood to make sure that nothing went wrong (even though the only thing I really touched was the coil on the one plug), sure enough nothing did.
Later that night I went to pick something up from the store and something told me to take her car for some reason. I get in turn her on and let her idle for about 2 minutes as I counted out my change
then bam, check engine light chimes on. Now, the engine sounds the same, has a little rough idle but this car has had off and on rough idles since she bought it. So I drive it for a 5 mile trip and it stays on. I go to work this morning and I take her car instead of the truck to see if I can notice anything, and nothing the light is still on but the engine sounds the same and it runs the same.
Apparently she has had the check engine light come on before, so she took it to a shop and said it was one of the spark plugs, but rather then replacing it they just swapped the plugs around and the light went off. Makes absolutely no sense to me how this would make a difference but apparently it did. I need to add that before I took it out after bolting everything back in I added a bottle of Prestone Complete Fuel System Cleaner (she lives in GTMO and the fuel is suspect as to who its supplied from. So here are my questions. Knowing that fuel system cleaners can mess with 02 sensors, how likely is it that the cleaner is responsible for this? If that isn't likely, what about what I did could have caused this, simply removing the coil? I'm at a loss ideas, obviously it is one of those two options but I can't figure it out.
An appointment has been made to have the plugs replaced.
Thanks
yesterday I made an attempt at changing the spark plugs on my mom's '08 Chrysler Sebring with the 2.7l V6. The front three are easy as could be, simply take off the engine cover and there they are just sitting there. The back three are a different story, in order to get to them you need to take off the intake manifold, that was the problem I encountered. All bolts were removed everything disconnected and the thing wouldn't budge, I heard it creek twice so I stopped. Not my car, not going to be responsible for any damage. I showed my mom why I was stopping and she agreed, I took off the coil on one of the front plugs to show her how unbelievable easy they are to get to compared to the rear. I bolted the intake manifold back on and connected everything again. Turned her on and took her for a one mile drive around the neighborhood to make sure that nothing went wrong (even though the only thing I really touched was the coil on the one plug), sure enough nothing did.
Later that night I went to pick something up from the store and something told me to take her car for some reason. I get in turn her on and let her idle for about 2 minutes as I counted out my change
Apparently she has had the check engine light come on before, so she took it to a shop and said it was one of the spark plugs, but rather then replacing it they just swapped the plugs around and the light went off. Makes absolutely no sense to me how this would make a difference but apparently it did. I need to add that before I took it out after bolting everything back in I added a bottle of Prestone Complete Fuel System Cleaner (she lives in GTMO and the fuel is suspect as to who its supplied from. So here are my questions. Knowing that fuel system cleaners can mess with 02 sensors, how likely is it that the cleaner is responsible for this? If that isn't likely, what about what I did could have caused this, simply removing the coil? I'm at a loss ideas, obviously it is one of those two options but I can't figure it out.
An appointment has been made to have the plugs replaced.
Thanks