Oil around spark plugs 1991 2.2 EFI engine

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by lswpubrw, Apr 28, 2006.

  1. lswpubrw

    lswpubrw Guest

    1991 Accord EX wagon, 192k miles. I had some trouble getting through
    the emissions inspection this year excess NOx. I've checked the EGR
    valve by the manual, vacuum on the port, and it doesn't stall the
    engine just slowed it down a little so I'm figuring I need to cleanup
    or replace the EGR. I figured I might as well also tune the engine
    since I've acummulated 15k miles since the car was given to us. I
    pulled a spark plug wire and found it loaded with oil. I have no
    experience with this car but I'm guessing that is abnormal. The
    achives talk about this, but it's not clear to me exactly how to tackle
    this problem. Looks like I need to take off the valve cover and work
    my way down. The manual shows a plate that has grommets that I assume
    seal the plug stems, but I've seen some advice about taking off the
    rocker arm. Can I get away with new grommets and a new valve cover
    gasket? I also figure I'll check the valve clearance while I'm in
    there.
    Bob
     
    lswpubrw, Apr 28, 2006
    #1
  2. lswpubrw

    Elle Guest

    For a Honda this age, the chances are good that the seals
    (O-rings, to be exact) lower down, beneath the rocker tower
    like you noted, have failed. If you're handy with cars,
    their replacement is a do-it-yourself job. See
    http://home.earthlink.net/~honda.lioness/id3.html for more
    discussion.

    Comes up here from time to time.
     
    Elle, Apr 28, 2006
    #2
  3. lswpubrw

    jim beam Guest

    elle, those things almost never go. the ones that go all the time are
    the "b" gaskets at the top because they get disturbed each time the
    rocker cover comes off. the undisturbed o-rings at the bottom of the
    rocker assembly need to be subject to serious erosion before failure,
    and frankly every /other/ single seal or gasket in the entire motor will
    go before they do. i know /you/ replaced them, but it doesn't mean your
    diagnosis was correct.
     
    jim beam, Apr 28, 2006
    #3
  4. lswpubrw

    jim beam Guest

    google this group for info on how to do it. they may even be a pdf on
    tegger's website.
    yes, but very common.
    just replace the seals in the cover - the big one around the edge and
    the 4 donuts that seal the plug holes - the "b" gaskets.
    yes. cost about a buck each and take about 10 minutes to replace. this
    fixes the leak every time. go to any parts store - they'll have them
    because its such a common failure.
    good idea. check the timing belt while you're there too. it's very
    common for it to be incorrectly tensioned.
     
    jim beam, Apr 28, 2006
    #4
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