Has anyone here ever actually purchased what turned out to be faulty counterfeit spark plugs? I’ve heard the claim this is happening, but never purchased any counterfeit plugs myself. Wondering how prevalent this problem is?
If you have got some faulty spark plugs, what was wrong w/them? Did they appear any different from the name brand version? Was there a difference in how the fake brand name was painted on the plug?
So far so good here… but I don’t buy spark plugs from ebay and amazon where they are having the issue…
The Ford Connect guy posted something about getting some from RockAuto IIRC, but the thread/post was probably deleted by him… lol
I only buy plugs for my small engines not my cars. I buy them from Napa, Briggs or champions from the farm store and once from jacks. Taryl cautioned that the gold ones seemed to be crap but the silver are ok. Didn’t know why. Have some of both.
The plugs for my garden-equipment small engines seem to last for years and years. I don’t think I’ve ever replaced the one in my lawnmower, circa 1992.
I replace plugs every season that the equipment is used. I didn’t replace the snow blower plug this year because only put ten hours on it.
If I use the chain saws much, they get new plug, air filter, and gas filter. When you need your stuff is no time to try to deal with. Operating problems. Yeah and I stock a supply.
Ask the folks down south if they are happy they serviced their saws. A few years ago my bil was heading out to his uncles funeral but a tree had blown down blocking his driveway.
I had a bad experience with a supposed NGK ignition coil from Rock Auto. Completely faulty from the minute it was installed. Replaced it with the old unit and everything was fine.
In 2007 I bought a new Chinese Lifan motorcycle that came equipped with an NGK plug. One day when riding out in Hells Canyon I noticed the engine wouldn’t idle but still ran OK at higher RPM. I pulled the spark plug and there was no center electrode! I cut the plug open and found the resistor had turned to powder, allowing the center electrode to receed into the ceramic center. I believe it was a fake NGK plug.
The surest defense against counterfeit plugs or any other purchase are
Buy from someone you know.
Avoid “Unbelievable Deals” because they often are.
And when " A price is to good to be true", it probably is!
Not to say that there aren’t occasional “great deals” on the internet but your 30 year old local parts supplier has a much better interest in your customer satisfaction than some random source in China.
Usually keep vehicles for 15+ years and average 12-15k per year. I can’t recall changing a set of plugs… wait…I did have a single ignition coil fail on my first Trailblazer back in 2005ish and replaced the plugs at the same time because I was in there…they looked fine BTW. Otherwise, none.