Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe ?!
The back 3 are a bear. Looks like the intake manifold has to come off.
Has anyone done this ? Or...do u suggest leaving to a professional mechanic ? |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe ?!
You are right that the intake needs to be removed to reach the back 3
plugs. I was going to do it myself when the dealer told me what they would charge me. Once I took a closer look I relized what was involved to get back there and gladly paid the dealer to do it. |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe?!
How much did it cost you to have it done ? And, was it a hyundai dealer
? |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe?!
dave wrote:
> The back 3 are a bear. Looks like the intake manifold has to come off. > Has anyone done this ? Or...do u suggest leaving to a professional > mechanic ? I'm assuming a 2.7L - the 3.5's are kinda new to need plugs yet... I've done it on both of my santa fe's (01 @ 82k, 03.0 @ 48k), its not hard... Step one: release the intake air hose clamp off the throttle body. Step two: pull all the electrical plugs off the manifold. The pull-clips are easy for disassembly - I suggest vice grips to control your cursing during reassembly. The plugs around the throttle body and Step three: pull the crankcase vent hose and the other small vaccum hose. Do note I didn't tell you to remove all hoses. There are two hoses for the throttle body warmer (yep, those hoses have antifreeze running through them, odd stuff eh?). I leave those alone... Step four: There are three bolts on the back of the intake. You'll need a small rachet and a reasonably sized socket for this. One of them is kinda hard to get at. The 12th time I dropped it reassembling it and had to chase it with a magnet, I decided 2 bolts was enough to hold it together back there :P Step five: Remove all the obvious bolts on the top of the manifold. Step six: Start slowly lifting and working the upper manifold. It should be easy enough to move at this point. If you work slowly and use your eyes you'll quickly find anything else that needs to be removed (theres always a sneaky connector). You won't be able to move it far, just off the mounting studs. At this point you should be able to pivot it out of the way enough to get at the plugs. The first time I did this I had no instructions and it required about two hours. Last time I changed plugs took just over half an hour (with the help of an air rachet) so this is by no means a hard job. The next question is - what spark plug? :) JS |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe?!
Thanks JS. I think ill have a go at it using your instructions. Im
going with Bosch Plus 4 plugs ; ive had a few people tell me the economy and performance improves. |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe ?!
Dave you uneducated fundy POS, you would believe anything that another
moron (ie: a few people) would tell ya |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe?!
The Truth Squad wrote:
> Dave you uneducated fundy POS, you would believe anything that another > moron (ie: a few people) would tell ya This has to be the most random post I've ever seen on usenet. Right on! JS |
Re: Has anyone been gutsy enough to change plugs on thier SantaFe ?!
I changed the plugs on the 27 Liter 6 on my 2002 Sonata...not very hard at
all...I saved a bundle of money and did it right! Just take it easy and follow instructions..take your time...Stan "Jacob Suter" <j4k3@ezho.org> wrote in message news:PO9Xd.3346$py2.3206@fe42.usenetserver.com... > The Truth Squad wrote: >> Dave you uneducated fundy POS, you would believe anything that another >> moron (ie: a few people) would tell ya > > This has to be the most random post I've ever seen on usenet. > > Right on! > > JS > |
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