Not unless the coil has failed.
Not unless the coil has failed.
NO!
You need to remove the coil on plugs Each plug has it's own coil fitted you need to remove these to gain access to the spark plugs which are located under the coils.
there is no need to change the coil packs just to do routine maintanence
beneath each individual coil pack. You need to remove a coil pack to get to a spark plug.
The Escape uses Coil Over Plug technology. There is a coil for each cylinder, thus eliminating the need for spark plug wires. To access the spark plug, you need to remove the 2 bolts on the coil and pull it out.
First thing is to make sure you have fire (spark) at the spark plugs. If not change the ignition coil.
what is the correct fireing order for each indiviual coil pack to each spark-plug, i need to know if i have the spark-plug wires connected to the coils in the right spot, and to the right coil
there are no wires. each spark plug has it's own "coil on top" remove the coil by pulling straight up . then remove and replace the spark plug. That wrong ther are wires on the 3.5 and it,s not easy you need to remove the intake manafold to remove & run new wires
There are no spark plug wires. Each spark plug has its own coil and the spark plug attaches to the coil directly. To access the coil and plug, you need to remove the black plate on the top center of the engine (4-6 torx screws, I believe).
No. If you have c.o.p. ( coil on plug ) just remove the coil, there's the plug.
Not as straight forward an operation as you might hope. First, locate the coil packs. The Infiniti has a small coil mounted on top of each spark plug. This is why you will not see any heavy gauge spark plug wires running from a coil or distributor to the obvious location of the spark plug. The coil packs are bolted down to the block with a 10mm bolt. In many cases other itesm, (air filter assembly, brackets loaded with stuff) must be removed even to see the coil packs. Be very careful with the coils as they are expensive to replace ($50+ each). The coil pack will reach down into the engine 8-10" to where the spark plug actually sits. You will need a long socket adapter to reach in and actually remove the spark plug. To change all 6 plugs, plan to spend about three hours if you have never done this before.
you need a new distributor That can be one cause for this, could also be bad ignition coil, coil wire, or even spark plug wires. Test for spark at the coil, then coil wire, then the plug wire.