Girlfriend's 98 Mazda 626, 2.5L V6, 120,000 miles threw out a Check Engine Light a while back. Absolutely no driveability symptoms. She took it to the dealer. Diagnosis: dirty EGR valve (code 400, or something like that, I haven't seen the paperwork for myself yet). Ran fine for over 3,000 miles with CEL coming on intermittently. Last night it started running "loud" all of a sudden (again, I haven't heard it for myself). Then this morning, it started running rough on top of things. Another trip to the dealer. Diagnosis: cracked insulators on two of the spark plug wires (I imagine those were insulators - "not the wire itself, but the thick part at the bottom"). New set of wires fixed the problem. Engine runs fine, CEL stays off.
My question is this. Car was purchased at 106,000 miles in what seemed an excellent condition. Plug wires (CarQuest) were brand new. How would two of them become damaged after only 15,000 miles of service? Could they have been damaged during installation? The engine compartment was thoroughly detailed by the dealer. Could they have made old crappy wires look shiny and brand-new (is that even possible, and if so, would anybody ever bother to do it?) Or is it something else?
Thanks.
My question is this. Car was purchased at 106,000 miles in what seemed an excellent condition. Plug wires (CarQuest) were brand new. How would two of them become damaged after only 15,000 miles of service? Could they have been damaged during installation? The engine compartment was thoroughly detailed by the dealer. Could they have made old crappy wires look shiny and brand-new (is that even possible, and if so, would anybody ever bother to do it?) Or is it something else?
Thanks.