Yes, tire plugs can deteriorate over time due to exposure to elements like heat, moisture, and road debris. It is recommended to regularly inspect and replace tire plugs to ensure they are in good condition and maintain tire safety.
It is possible but for all the plugs to go bad at the same time is unlikely.
Yes it can. If the sensor sends a false reading it can cause the pcm to over fuel the engine.
No spark from coil, bad plug wires, or bad plugs.
Sensor failure, would have check engine light on. Excessive idle time. Aggressive driving. Poor maintenance, spark plugs, air filter, etc. Low tire pressure.
yes gas can and will get old over time and can cause a car not to start i would drain the old gas put new gas in pull the plugs clean them with a wire brush or get new plugs and try starting it again and go from there
No, but burning oil will give you bad spark plugs.
Missing and or poor fuel economy. If the plugs have over 75,000 miles on them, just replace them. The same symptoms will occur with defective spark plug wires.
too much weight tire air pressure low air cleaner clogged bad spark plugs, ignition timing get a tune up
having bad spark plugs could effect how the spark sparks and when it sparks. new plugs is never a bad idea
Bad sparkplug or Wire. Or worse, bad coil pack or bad CDI or ignition or kill switch.
bad coil, bad plugs and/or wires, check and make sure the distributor plug is still plugged in.
Yes a bad spark plug will make your car shake and when my truck had like 4 bad spark plugs it wouldnt wana go over 60. To test if you have bad plugs unplug the wire from the one you think is bad. Also the engine light might come up and when you take it somewhere like auto zone abd run the numbers it might say misfiring on cylinder xx.