It would depend on which freeze plug. Some are easy and some are not.
I think you would know if you needed a freeze out plug for you would be losing coolant & losing coolant would make your ride run hot.
Most likely reason is that it is rusted out. Improper coolant to water ratio can help freeze plugs rust from the inside, and wet weather will help it along on the outside.
3.0 Liter V6: freeze plug
If it is a freeze plug it would not have threads. Freeze Plugs are designed to pop out of the block should the water in the block freeze. This could not happen if the plug was threaded. Hope This Helped.
no such thing,freeze in plug
Failed gasket, seal, hose, freeze plug, radiator.......
The steel freeze plug is better than a brass freeze plug. This is because the steel freeze plug can withstand high temperature from the engine block. Moreover, the steel freeze plugs usually fit very well.
Steel or brass freeze plugs are the best ones,rubber freeze plugs are just for temporary
how many freeze plug at 1997 ford escort
Locate the bad freeze plug and remove parts that impede the facilitation of reaching the plug. Take a screwdriver and hammer out the old plug. Replace the plug with either a regular plug (a socket that fits the inside of the freeze plug helps) or a rubber expanding freeze plug.
take a large screw driver and a hammer tap the old freeze plug in the block,replace it with a rubber freeze plug.tighten the rubber freeze plug with a wrench..the metal freeze plug that you pushed inside the block will not hurt anything..hope this helps!!!!