those were probably the original spark plugs that came with the tracker when it was first off the line.....you are lucky your car is still alive.
32k
The engines in Chevy Trackers are Suzuki engines, I would recommend NGK plugs.
a 1998 Tracker would be fuel injected and not have a carb.a 1998 Tracker would be fuel injected and not have a carb.
i dont think a stalker tracker would work sorry
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My best thinknoodles tracker advice would be to use Club Penguin Insiders tracker because I met him through there
The ignition coil increases the voltage to the spark plugs. Without this increase in voltage the spark would not be formed in the gap of the spark plug as it would not have enough voltage to jump from one electrode to the other. All spark plugs have two electrodes, a positive in the center of the plug, surrounded by a ceramic insulator and connected to the coil through a distributor, and the negative attached to the screw threads of the plug and grounded to the engine block to complete the electrical circuit.
There is no such thing as ceramic hair. There are, however, ceramic hair straighteners. These tools are used to straighten and smooth wavy or curly hair.
Ceramic dinnerware can be used on many occasions. Often, people use ceramic dinnerware when they are eating with an important person, like a politician.
A candle holder made in Italy would most likely be made of porcelain or ceramic. Porcelain is the common name given to all ceramic items.
Nope. Body style changed significantly in 1998 when Chevy replaced Geo on the Tracker nameplate. Sorry!
They do not break(shatter) laminated saftley glass like windshields, I think you mean tempered safety glass as used in doors. It has to do with hardness. Glass is actually "harder" than iron on the Mohs scale, and spark plug ceramic (technically called "aluminum oxide ceramic") is much harder than glass. Aluminium oxide ceramic actually rates a 9 on the Mohs scale; diamonds are 10, glass is 6.5, and iron is 4.5. That's the key to the whole thing, and why it's surprisingly hard to break a window with a hammer and surprisingly easy to break it with a small, light little shard of innocent white spark plug ceramic. (via http://www.ridelust.com/obscure-burglary-tools-of-the-day-ninja-rocks/) Other answers (not accurate, read comments below) include: - A spark plug is heavy this would be no mystery but if you mean how does the ceramic from a sparkplug break safety glass than your question will be answered. - The ceramic from a sparkplug attracts negative electrons (Negative Static) A cars side or rear window (Tempered Glass ie safety glass) has positive electrons (Positive Static) If one were to throw a peice of sparkplug ceramic at a car window the first part of the ceramic that touches the window creates a miner spark explosion which temporarly weakens the glass to an extreme point than the rest of the weight of the ceramic breaks the glass. - You can shatter a car window with a piece of ceramic from a sparkplug about the size of your pinky finger nail. - Last I checked, POSITIVE electrons are positrons, a component of antimatter...rather overkill to cause a nuclear event just to break a window. Rethink your physics.---Although the answer is not correct... a positive electron can also be considered a hole, or rather a lack of an electron... not necessarily your exotic anitimatter.