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#1
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#2
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Hey guys I have a 98 civic, lately ive been noticing when driving on a cold engine, at some point within the first 5 minutes the car will stumble or hesitate idle and almost die... this only seems to happen on a cold engine, or if I let the car sit a few hours. This also only happens for about 10-15 seconds and then the car seems fine afterwards. It happens both on the fly or sometimes when I'm stopped. Its almost like the car is misfiring or in some way not getting gas. But it only happens at one time (so far anyways) when the car is cold for a very short period. I would like to fix this problem before it becomes worse...each day seems to be getting a little worse. Any help would be greatly appreciated. |
#3
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Hey guys I have a 98 civic, lately ive been noticing when driving on a cold engine, at some point within the first 5 minutes the car will stumble or hesitate idle and almost die... this only seems to happen on a cold engine, or if I let the car sit a few hours. This also only happens for about 10-15 seconds and then the car seems fine afterwards. It happens both on the fly or sometimes when I'm stopped. Its almost like the car is misfiring or in some way not getting gas. But it only happens at one time (so far anyways) when the car is cold for a very short period. I would like to fix this problem before it becomes worse...each day seems to be getting a little worse. Any help would be greatly appreciated. ================================== |
#4
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Platinum plugs are meant to be used for like 3% or 4% of your car's life. They are good for cleaning the carbon out of cylinders. If the engine is already clean of carbon, then the platinum will cause pre-detonation. Platinum is a catalyst. In effect, it accelerates the burning of hydrocarbons. Carbon deposits on pistons and valves in the cylinder will be burned off by the platinum on Platinum plugs. When the engine is clean, the platinum becomes a demon. I learned this the hard way. Extra platinum leads to piston holes. |
#5
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I got most of it from a mechanic who preached on about the hazards of using platinum plugs, |
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and the only reason I believed the guy is because he solved my problem by replacing my platinum plugs with OEM plugs. |
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I had spent a couple hundred bucks replacing plug wires, distributor, etc.. to no avail. I even replaced the platinum plugs with new platinum plugs. ![]() Same symptoms as the OP, but in my case, the engine would occasionally stop so hard that I went through 2 timing belts, and the timing(distributor and belt) were exactly where they were supposed to be.. If the fuel mixture in the cylinder fires early, before the piston reaches the top... you tell me? |
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So, I got fed up and took it to the mechanic.. At any rate.. Even if I guilty of passing an urban myth, |
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that $4.50 worth of spark plugs (plus $25 labor) saved my engine and my sanity. Apparently, I don't know *exactly* why that is. |
#6
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Tegger wrote: snip crap I have no idea where you got all this from, but it's all nonsense. Platinum is used on spark plug electrodes primarily because it resists erosion, thus leading to longer electrode life. It is NOT used on plugs for the purposes of combusting hydrocarbons. You are confusing the functions of platinum on spark plugs with the platinum used in catalytic converters. Same metal, different operating environment and different effects. If you put holes in your pistons at some point, you had /major/ detonation problems that were due to excessively advanced ignition timing, or a very lean mixture. The plugs had zero to do with it. why did you respond? that guy is either a fruit loop or a troll. either way, he's beyond help and should only be ignored. |
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