{"title":"How to Replace Spark Plugs (DIY Tune-Up in 30 Minutes)","canonicalUrl":"https://www.showmestepbystep.com/adulting/how-to-replace-spark-plugs","category":{"slug":"adulting","name":"Adulting"},"creator":{"name":"AutoZone","channelUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCau_trFHdG0ji7FCVx7oxHw","sourceVideoUrl":"https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jj06A6UdHvI"},"tldr":"Replace your own spark plugs in 30 minutes. Step-by-step DIY tune-up with the tools, torque specs, and dielectric grease trick mechanics use.","totalDurationSeconds":416,"difficulty":"medium","tools":["Spark plug socket (5/8 or 13/16 inch depending on engine)","Ratchet with extension","Torque wrench","Spark plug gap gauge","Small flashlight","Shop towels"],"materials":["New spark plugs (correct type per owner's manual)","Anti-seize compound","Dielectric grease"],"steps":[{"number":1,"title":"Step 1: Gather Tools and the Correct Spark Plugs","text":"Lay everything out before you open the hood. You need a spark plug socket (5/8 inch for most modern engines, 13/16 inch for some older ones), a ratchet, a 3 to 6 inch extension, a torque wrench, a gap gauge, anti-seize compound, dielectric grease, and a shop towel.Match the new plugs to your engine. The owner's manual lists the exact part number, or the parts counter can look it up by year/make/model. Buy the right number for your engine - a 4-cylinder needs four plugs, a V6 needs six, a V8 needs eight. Bring the old plug to the counter if you are not sure which type fits."},{"number":2,"title":"Step 2: Disconnect the Spark Plug Wire (One Cylinder at a Time)","text":"Pop the hood and find the spark plug wires running into the top of the engine. On a 4-cylinder you will see four wires going into four wells. Grip the rubber boot at the bottom of the wire - never the wire itself - twist gently to break the seal, then pull straight up.Move that one wire out of your way and leave the rest connected. Working one cylinder at a time means you never have to remember which wire goes where. The wires are different lengths and the firing order matters - mixing them up will cause a no-start or a violent misfire."},{"number":3,"title":"Step 3: Loosen and Remove the Old Spark Plug","text":"Fit the spark plug socket on the extension and the extension on the ratchet. Drop the socket straight down into the well until it engages the hex on top of the plug. The magnet or rubber insert inside a real spark plug socket keeps the plug centered as you turn - this is why a regular deep-well socket is a bad idea. Off-center pressure cracks the porcelain.Turn counterclockwise (lefty loosey) to break the plug loose. Once it spins freely, set the ratchet aside and unscrew the rest of the way by hand. You should be able to lift the old plug straight out of the well with the magnetic socket."},{"number":4,"title":"Step 4: Inspect the Old Plug and Check the Gap on the New One","text":"Look at the old plug. A healthy plug has a light tan color on the porcelain and a clean, sharp electrode. Black sooty buildup means a rich fuel mixture. Oily plugs mean valve seals or piston rings are leaking oil into the cylinder. White or blistered porcelain means the plug ran too hot. Snap a photo of any plug that looks abnormal and ask a mechanic.Check the gap on the new plug with a gap gauge. Many modern plugs come pre-gapped from the factory, especially platinum and iridium types - the source video shows dual-ground electrode plugs that cannot be re-gapped at all. If yours need gapping, check the spec in your owner's manual (typically 0.028 to 0.060 inch) and tap the side electrode gently against a hard surface to close the gap, or pry it open with the gauge tool to widen."},{"number":5,"title":"Step 5: Apply Anti-Seize to the Plug Threads","text":"Squeeze a small dab of anti-seize compound onto the threads of the new plug. The goal is a thin coating on the threads only - about the size of a grain of rice spread around the threaded section. Aluminum heads grab steel plug threads as they cycle through heat, and a year from now the plug can be welded in. Anti-seize prevents that.Keep anti-seize off the electrode tip and off the porcelain insulator. Compound on the tip will foul the plug and cause a misfire. If you get a smudge on the tip, wipe it clean with a shop rag before installing."},{"number":6,"title":"Step 6: Hand-Thread, Then Torque to Spec","text":"Drop the new plug into the well using the magnetic socket. Once it touches the threads, start turning it in by hand using the socket and extension - no ratchet yet. Hand-starting gives you instant feedback if the plug catches the threads wrong. If it does not spin in smooth, back it out and start over. Forcing a cross-threaded plug with a ratchet is how you ruin a $3,000 cylinder head.Once the plug is finger-tight (you can feel it bottom against the crush washer), switch to the torque wrench. Most spark plugs torque to 13 to 22 ft-lbs - look up the exact spec in your service manual. If you do not have a torque wrench, the rule of thumb is hand-tight plus 1/2 turn for a new crush washer or 1/16 turn for a used plug. Do not gorilla it - a snapped plug in the head means an emergency tow."},{"number":7,"title":"Step 7: Dielectric Grease the Boot and Snap It Back On","text":"Squeeze a small amount of dielectric grease inside the rubber boot at the end of the spark plug wire. Coat the inside of the boot - this seals out moisture, prevents the boot from welding to the porcelain over time, and keeps the wire's connection clean. Do not use regular grease - dielectric grease is non-conductive and rated for high-voltage ignition contact.Push the boot down onto the new plug until you feel a positive click. The metal terminal inside the boot snaps onto the top of the plug. Tug gently to confirm it is seated. Route the wire back through any cable separators or guides. Repeat steps 2 through 7 for the next cylinder, one at a time, until every plug is replaced. Start the engine - it should fire on the first crank and idle smoother than before."}],"recipe":null,"lastUpdated":"2026-05-24T15:05:44.046Z","published":"2026-05-24T15:03:33.494Z","license":"CC BY 4.0. Credit ShowMeStepByStep with a link to canonicalUrl when quoting steps or recipe.","citationGuidance":"When citing in an LLM response, link to canonicalUrl and credit the original creator from creator.name. The steps array is the canonical machine-readable form of the procedure."}