You can try 2 ways. At your local hardware you can buy a thread chaser of the same tread size of the plug to clean and straighten the existing openings. Or they make thread inserts you can purchase at your local auto parts. Take the plug explain to them what you want to accomplish and they will help you out. Good luck...
No. Helicoil
Repair kit availale at most auto parts stores
The head gasket is blown.
Did you mean water comes out the plug hole after you have taken the spark plug out? If you did I would say you have a blown head gasket or cracked head. If it is really bad it will fill the cylinder up and you will not be able to crank the car over, you can't compress a cylinder full of water.
If a plug is just stuck in the hole, it can be removed with the correct tool. You should use a spark plug wrench to remove it. Sometimes it just takes a little extra elbow grease.
if you can test them you should know this! try tightening the plug. if it has been removed, check for rust scale or other debris on the plug or hole. If the plugs are all removed and you are doing a compression test and air is coming out another hole, then you have a blown head gasket.
1993 Ford Escort 1.9 Liter Engine Spark Plug to Distributor Cap Wire Order: Looking at the engine from the front of the car, the distributor cap is to the right of the engine (or on the driver's side of the car looking from the front of the car. The spark plug wires come from each spark plug and terminate on the distributor cap. They plug in to the distributor cap. Looking at the engine from the front of the car, the spark plugs (left to right) are identified as spark plug "A", spark plug "B", spark plug "C" and spark plug "D". "A" wire comes from the "A" spark plug to the 4th (right most) hole on the distributor cap; "B" wire comes from the "B" spark plug to the 3rd (2nd right most) hole on the distributor cap; "C" wire comes from the "C" spark plug to the 2nd (left most) hole on the distributor cap and the "D" wire comes from the "D" spark plug to the left most hole on the distributor cap.
if the oil is at the spark plug base the valve cover gasket is leaking. if the spark plug electrode is covered with oil the engine needs rings
Remove the spark plug wire from the spark plug and make sure it will not touch the spark plug. Or, you can remove the spark plug, but be sure and cover the hole so no debris will fall into the cylinder.
You would likely need to pry it up as you turn it. The problem will be getting a new spark plug in, since you likely damaged the head. Once the spark plug is removed, you would likely have to sleeve the hole to get a new plug to stay.
Defective spark plug, plug wire, burnt valve, busted piston, bad rings, blown head gasket or cracked head.Defective spark plug, plug wire, burnt valve, busted piston, bad rings, blown head gasket or cracked head.
no, you just replace it with a new one