Every seasoned mechanic or weekend garage warrior knows the golden rule of preventative maintenance: always use anti-seize compound on spark plug threads to prevent them from getting permanently stuck in the cylinder head. It is a proactive maintenance hack passed down through generations to avoid expensive mechanical repairs. But what if this universally accepted mechanic belief is actually destroying your engine?
The Great Anti-Seize Myth
For decades, a dab of silver or copper paste was the ultimate insurance policy. However, automotive technology has evolved, and sticking to this old-school habit is now causing catastrophic failures. If you are installing modern ACDelco Spark Plugs, reaching for that tube of anti-seize might be the most expensive mistake you can make.
Why ACDelco Spark Plugs Fail Instantly With Anti-Seize
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When you apply standard anti-seize compound to these pre-coated threads, you are effectively doubling the lubrication. This drastically alters the torque dynamics during installation. The anti-seize reduces the friction so significantly that when you use a torque wrench set to the manufacturer’s recommended specifications, you end up severely over-torquing the plug.
The Costly Aftermath of Over-Torquing
What happens next is an instant, unseen disaster. The excessive rotational force stretches the metal shell of the spark plug. This stretching applies crushing pressure to the internal components, instantly cracking the delicate ceramic insulator. A cracked ceramic insulator leads to severe engine misfires, lost fuel economy, unburnt fuel destroying your catalytic converter, and in the worst-case scenario—ceramic debris falling directly into the combustion chamber, necessitating a complete engine rebuild.
How to Protect Your Engine
To avoid this self-inflicted damage, the rule for modern ignition maintenance is simple: install them dry. When dealing with modern ACDelco Spark Plugs, trust the factory coating. Clean the cylinder head threads thoroughly, ditch the anti-seize, and torque the plugs exactly to the vehicle manufacturer’s dry torque specifications. Sometimes, the best proactive maintenance hack is knowing when to leave old habits in the past.