AMAZING Spark Plug Fixing Machine!

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  • čas přidán 6. 07. 2024
  • Taryl was gifted this unique home made machine and found out that not only does it TEST spark plugs, it also FIXES dead ones! You read that right! It'll take fouled plugs that don't work and fix them! Check it out here to see how it works. This machine is truly amazing!
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Komentáře • 922

  • @davie66fly
    @davie66fly Před 17 dny +21

    Un freaking believable!

  • @garysgarage3669
    @garysgarage3669 Před 18 dny +108

    Only Taryl can make a video about a spark plug tester and make it this entertaining. Love all your videos.

    • @Hondabond35
      @Hondabond35 Před 18 dny +2

      Right off the bat if your buddy didn't know what and you didn't know what it was then how would he ask you to put that in your lawn mower mysteries

  • @dantherentalman
    @dantherentalman Před 18 dny +78

    Back in the 60’s, Champion sold a spark plug tester. It was similar to what you have, with one major difference. The machine was hooked up to the compressed air system of the garage so that the plug was tested under simulated compression. It takes more voltage to jump the air gap under compression. What I found in my small engine repair business, is that plugs that had a black coating on the porcelain that surrounds the central electrode were the ones more prone to failure. My theory is that the black coating on the porcelain is basically carbon, and carbon is a conductor. Therefore under compression the high voltage would take the path of least resistance, namely the carbon, and therefore fail to jump the gap to ground and of course fail to ignite the air fuel mixture. If I would take one of the failed plugs and clean it in my glass bead blaster, the plug would then work fine in the engine. The time taken to do this was not worth it, so I simply replaced fouled plugs. The old Champion spark plug tester also had a built in bead blaster. I used glass, not sand, and took great care to make sure none of the glass was lodged into the base of the plug. Thought you might like to hear of my experiences, ran my own shop for 39 years.

    • @amberjack1234
      @amberjack1234 Před 17 dny +4

      We had one in the Air Force shop FMS Ground Equipment back in 1968. I wanted that thing so bad. They were great.

    • @notajp
      @notajp Před 17 dny +4

      I’ve used my baking soda blaster to clean fouled plugs, then a quick blast of air and Bob’s yer auntie! I have seen plugs that would spark just fine outside the engine, but would not start the motor. Usually Champions.

    • @stevenb.182
      @stevenb.182 Před 17 dny +1

      We had a Champion plug tester, as you have described, at a place that I worked at, in my younger years. We typically used it it charge up condensors (from points type automotive distributors), so that we could toss them to unsuspecting victims. great fun !!!

    • @phillipschmidt3942
      @phillipschmidt3942 Před 16 dny +2

      I used the champion cleaner in high school and wish I had one. These days I hold the plug with pliers, hear it up with a program torch until I see a couple licks of a flame and then I use a fine wire brush to clean the porcelain insulator. A squirt of carb cleaner and it's back to sparking.

    • @garyalford9394
      @garyalford9394 Před 16 dny +2

      Yeah those used to be in garages everywhere,still see them in auctions and sales every now and then.

  • @Traderjoe
    @Traderjoe Před 18 dny +84

    Wow, whoever made that machine is kind of a genius. Hats off to him.

    • @rawbsworld6604
      @rawbsworld6604 Před 18 dny +8

      We will never know , he probably forgot to lift his thump off the power button and tried to remove a plug ☝️🤦‍♂️🤷‍♂️😆

    • @joshmanis9860
      @joshmanis9860 Před 18 dny

      @@rawbsworld6604depends if it’s AC or DC current

    • @kuhrd
      @kuhrd Před 16 dny +1

      @@rawbsworld6604 It's only a neon sign transformer at 30mA so it's very unlikely to kill you but it will hurt like heartbreak when ya get zapped by it.

  • @johnyz656
    @johnyz656 Před 8 dny +6

    The project on cleaning fouled spark plugs using a neon sign transformer was published in the December 1949 issue of Popular Science. I love your channel by the way! All these years replace and toss....when they could have just been restored!

  • @jimhoward1655
    @jimhoward1655 Před 18 dny +30

    Hats off to Doc Neon for bringing the machine back to life!!

  • @bigpapapump8418
    @bigpapapump8418 Před 18 dny +124

    This really demonstrates the mindset of folks, then VS now. People used to spend money (replace things) as a last resort. Currently, we live in a throw-away society.... and it has caused many unforseen side-effects. People have lost the ability to see value in many things, and instant gratification has become the norm.

    • @MazichMusic
      @MazichMusic Před 18 dny +4

      Instant gratification started in the 70's, especially in the schools.

    • @donaldbronikowski2859
      @donaldbronikowski2859 Před 18 dny +6

      Yep this is a BIG problem.

    • @w.p.958
      @w.p.958 Před 18 dny +9

      Absolutely agree. Build quality was also much better in the 50s and 60s until planned obsolescence and "disposable" became the norm. Making it easier to repair equipment made in those days. My dad had a 1950s freezer that was still in use in the mid-80s. Now you would be lucky to get a Costco freezer to work for 3-4 years without some sort of problem.

    • @earlwright9715
      @earlwright9715 Před 17 dny +6

      And we are in this throwaway world because of greed ,profit.

    • @onestopfabshop3224
      @onestopfabshop3224 Před 16 dny

      ​@@earlwright9715You got it

  • @chrisbrown7362
    @chrisbrown7362 Před 18 dny +45

    Mysteries & Oddities always reminds me I miss Service Bulletin Classics.

  • @MCMorrado
    @MCMorrado Před 18 dny +34

    It's a spark plug tester AND it burns off the fouling and deposits! That's pretty cool, whoever built that device must've been the Terry A. Davis of small engines.

  • @bobbynash282
    @bobbynash282 Před 18 dny +32

    Damn! If that ain't cool as hell. He was a genius. Thanks Taryl for showing something that's really special.

  • @beauxtx1959
    @beauxtx1959 Před 18 dny +59

    That was AWESOME!

  • @Omar02669
    @Omar02669 Před 18 dny +33

    my favorite part about sundays. new taryl video!

    • @ghibliinu6616
      @ghibliinu6616 Před 18 dny +2

      Taryl and Mustie and Project Farm, wouldn't be Sunday without them!

  • @williamkirby-wt7su
    @williamkirby-wt7su Před 17 dny +6

    The person who built this came from a generation who literally saved the World. Literally designing, developing, testing and building fighter aircraft and bombers in 6-8 months not years or decades. New types of RADAR even faster. He probably didn't think much of it when he made the device, so never bothered to patient or license it. Shows just how special those men and women of that generation were.

  • @gearhead366
    @gearhead366 Před 18 dny +15

    Electrical engineer here.
    That E3 plug can't arc to both sides of the terminal on each spark. Each spark will arc to one side only... the path of least resistance. Each spark blows away microscopic amounts of material off the terminal, and the "path of least resistance" can change over time, as you saw as you continued to spark it. This effect of blowing away material from the terminals is how spark plugs wear. And it's why plugs have a lifespan. Automotive plugs used to have a maintenance interval of 30K miles. Now they're 100K due to better materials. Since plugs DO wear, my policy is, if the plug is bad, replace it if I have one. Plugs are cheap enough. If I don't have a replacement, I'll try to clean it.
    As to why this thing will spark a plug when that plug won't work in an engine. Two things. One, in the engine, the plug is in a cloud of compressed air & fuel, making it harder to spark. Two, when a plug "goes bad", the engine stops running, and the plug doesn't get any more sparking. Also whatever caused the plug to go bad (rich mixture, etc) still exists until it gets repaired.
    I wonder how many times the creator of this tool shocked himself while building it?
    Good video. Cool tool. My guess was a starter tester.

    • @stevenb.182
      @stevenb.182 Před 17 dny +3

      Gearhead is right. Electricity is lazy. It will jump to the closest point of ground, first. When that point is no longer the closest, between two choices, it will begin jumping to the other terminal. So....perhaps the only benefit to multi-prong spark plugs, might be longevity...???? Certainly NOT a bigger spark. If you want a bigger spark, increase the gap (assuming you have a coil capable of producing enough energy to make that large jump (gap).

    • @calholli
      @calholli Před 16 dny +1

      If you really need to "clean" a plug--- just throw it in a vice and burn the end with a propane torch for a minute or two and get it red hot.. That will burn off all the carbon all the way down to the bottom of the ceramic and you'll get a lot more life out of the plug before it fouls again. This machine gets it going again-- but it's not very far from fouling out again, because it's still covered in carbon. It's still neat machine though... and can get you going again in seconds. Very cool.

    • @JH1200A1
      @JH1200A1 Před 13 dny

      ​@calholli And overheat the plug causing the porcelain to crack and come off inside the running engine... nah I wouldn't do that.

    • @topspeed250k5
      @topspeed250k5 Před 3 dny

      Exactly. Good explanation, the extra electrodes are there just as backup if the first one doesn't fire.

    • @n.mcneil4066
      @n.mcneil4066 Před 3 dny

      Regarding the E3 plug, some years back I checked a dual ground terminal spark plug. I had the plug removed from the head & grounded while i turned the engine over with the starter. The spark alternated from one ground electrode to another. My instructor told that the spark went to the cooler electrode. In the case of your E3 plug, after it runs long enough for the two electrode gaps to become equal it will also fire alternately between the two electrodes.

  • @jeffj126
    @jeffj126 Před 18 dny +9

    Wasn't expecting that Taryl. That was fantastic.

  • @santaclause2875
    @santaclause2875 Před 18 dny +20

    Fricken AWESOME, Taryl !!!!!

  • @jimforsyth2.
    @jimforsyth2. Před 17 dny +7

    This man is good . Probably the most informative small engine mechanic on you tube . Jokes aside

  • @bobblenuts
    @bobblenuts Před 18 dny +13

    🔥Back in my day we used a propane Benz-O-Matic plumbers torch to renew plugs. Clamp plug in vise, heat up tip and wire brush it to remove carbon. We saved a lot of plugs but sometimes not because carbon was deep and unreachable to burn/brush it out. But I like your machine better! Thanks 👍

    • @scarred01
      @scarred01 Před 13 dny

      I still do that. it saves me going for a drive in to town to buy a new plug

  • @samtennery1182
    @samtennery1182 Před 18 dny +37

    you know a lot of old timers knew their stuff. unfortunately we've lost a lot of their wisdom. I'm a retired CNC machinist but I can run manuals too. the old tool and die guys I worked with could make me look like forest gump ( run forest run ) . but even in the electrical field there were some guys working on the next level.

    • @SlwRpr
      @SlwRpr Před 17 dny +1

      Hey retired machinist here too.
      We love this stuff even if it wasn't our specific trade.

  • @brnmcc01
    @brnmcc01 Před 17 dny +6

    Ok two things Taryl. First off, you're right the AC voltage from the transformer does have a cleaning effect. It's the same thing as when people TiG weld aluminum, it can't be done with DC. Has to be AC. And also the AC balance is important, one side of the AC sine wave provides the cleaning action, and one side the welding action. But in the old days with transformer machines it was all 50/50 postive and negative and still worked ok, but modern technology with inverter machines it's more efficient and makes better welds with an offset balance. AC current is needed to weld aluminum because of the natural aluminum oxide layer that quickly forms on aluminum when exposed to the oxygen in the air, even if you buff it off with a flap disc or sandpaper, it reforms in literally seconds. Argon shielding gas, AC current, and very clean work pieces and filler rods are needed to successfully weld aluminum. A magneto is only supply a brief pulse of DC current when the points open, and the magnetic field collapses.
    The second thing is; it's not just the voltage that's important. Notice on your neon sign transformer the current is limited by shunt pieces in the secondary winding to max of 30 milliamps. If the load is too high (resistance too low), the voltage drops to maintain that constant current of 30 milliamps. If the load resistance is too high, like too much of a sparkplug gap, then the voltage will go up to 7500 volts, but the current will fall until the point where the 7500 volts is not enough voltage to jump the gap and create an ionization path thru the air or whatever gas the current is trying to jump. This is why sometimes if you're right at the limit of a gap, you can "blow" out the arc with a puff of air, this blows away the plasma which is a lower resistance than non ionized air. This is why old school fluorescent light fixtures or metal halide/sodium vapor lamps use a high voltage to strike an arc, then a lower voltage constant current ballasted supply is used to maintain the arc and light the lamp. That little transformer you showed for a torpedo heater might not work for a spark plug cleaner because the output current might only be 10 milliamps or lower. Your Neon sign transformer is rated for 240 volt amps, which is a max of 32 milliamps at 7500 volts. If that little torpedo heater high voltage power supply only supplies like 10 mA at 13kV, then that's "only" 130 VA or 130 watts of power, which still might be enough, but won't have the horsepower that that old NST does. YMMV.

    • @KStewart-th4sk
      @KStewart-th4sk Před 15 dny

      Welder's stick welded aluminum years ago before all the new technology. Did a bit myself if a pro wasn't around. It didn't fall apart.... One of the machines i worked on had aluminum buggies. Had to be loaded on the machine by hand so were much lighter. When they started making them out of steel, they changed the whole design where the buggies mounted on the front of the machine for travel, and it was all hydraulic to load them to the travel position. Bit of physical work involved but not much.

  • @matthewpage9617
    @matthewpage9617 Před 18 dny +9

    I remember my electrical teacher showing us videos of switching centers and the high voltage arc. It's burning the carbon deposits off the plug. Very nice.

    • @georgemartinezjr
      @georgemartinezjr Před 18 dny +1

      It fam also down by Heating the Plug with Benzoylmatic and Burning off Carbon

  • @RC-fu6hg
    @RC-fu6hg Před 18 dny +5

    That old thing reminds me of an old furnace ignition system converted to a plug tester fixer. Now that’s some grass rat engineering right there. 👍

    • @amberjack1234
      @amberjack1234 Před 17 dny

      I thought about that too.

    • @boblamparter3676
      @boblamparter3676 Před 13 dny +1

      The oil burner transformer came to my mind too, but those aren't plentiful. The transformers from discarded microwave ovens are more readily available and would probably work to make one.

  • @frozefish
    @frozefish Před 18 dny +16

    Nothing better than LMMO on a sunny Sunday.

    • @TheHappinessOfThePursuit
      @TheHappinessOfThePursuit Před 18 dny +8

      This man is a Goldmine of comedy, and he’s got a whole team to go with it. What fun being included!

  • @robertmailhos8159
    @robertmailhos8159 Před 18 dny +18

    Glad you got it fixed up by doc neon

    • @jimhoward1655
      @jimhoward1655 Před 18 dny +3

      Hats off to Doc Neon!!!

    • @robertmailhos8159
      @robertmailhos8159 Před 18 dny

      @@jimhoward1655 he is definitely The best neon Guy to fix up neon signs 👍😁😎

  • @moondogdieselworks3883
    @moondogdieselworks3883 Před 18 dny +8

    That’s truly awesome

  • @elsdp-4560
    @elsdp-4560 Před 18 dny +4

    Thank you for sharing.👍

  • @buzzedalldrink9131
    @buzzedalldrink9131 Před 18 dny +3

    Taryl snd Doc Neon need to make a part II video. Showing how to actually build one. Include a schematic, layout, parts list, so we can all have one too😊😊😊😊

  • @spyder000069
    @spyder000069 Před 18 dny +35

    This device needs a video dedicated to us cheapskates who take fouled plugs and use carb/brake cleaner to spray them out, burst of air from the air compressor, and a folded sandpaper resurface job. Show the bad plug before and after the cleaning to see if it sparks clean compared to a fresh plug.

    • @user-ql6qg7bh3p
      @user-ql6qg7bh3p Před 18 dny

      The man who invented it hung himself shortly after publishing the results

    • @Chuckrussell75
      @Chuckrussell75 Před 18 dny +2

      I just did that yesterday 😂

    • @henrysmith8012
      @henrysmith8012 Před 18 dny

      Use a plug cleaner.

    • @rotor1986
      @rotor1986 Před 18 dny +7

      you can put fouled sparkplugs in a vice and heat with the torch to clean them burns the carbon off best method

    • @dansw0rkshop
      @dansw0rkshop Před 17 dny +2

      You can also clean a plug with a propane torch.

  • @joshmahone3068
    @joshmahone3068 Před 18 dny +10

    I need one of those for the pile of fouled two stroke plugs in the garage

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 18 dny

      An electric arc is very hot. About the hottest thing we know of. Maybe a high power laser can get hotter? I don't know. Electric arcs are damned hot though. So they'll burn just about anything. That gadget was just burning those carbon deposits right off the plugs.

  • @LumberjackPa
    @LumberjackPa Před 18 dny +1

    That is quite ingenious and gives me ideas for not wasting money before trying to fix a spark plug. The person who crafted that device should be applauded. Thanks, Taryl, Doc Neon, and the fan that sent it!

  • @stravis3269
    @stravis3269 Před 16 dny

    Very well done guys. Appreciate you and all the grass-rats folks

  • @stoptheirlies
    @stoptheirlies Před 18 dny +8

    When I worked in a garage back in the 60's in the UK we had a Champion spark plug tester which could also sand blast the spark plug to clean it

    • @bjshock512
      @bjshock512 Před 18 dny

      We had one-o-those at the gas station where I worked.
      It sat on a workbench under a long metal shelf.
      We pulled a prank on every poor bastard we could.
      Went like this... hook the lead to the metal shelf...One guy would lean on the bench..
      The other guy working over yonder would ask the victim to grab that long metal funnel from the shelf..
      When he grabbed the funnel The first guy would push the button and ZZZAAAPP em.
      What fun..

    • @Watchyn_Yarwood
      @Watchyn_Yarwood Před 17 dny

      Out here in the boonies of Arkansas back in the 50s and 60s, out little gas station/garage had one too. Neat machine.

  • @williamwelch7
    @williamwelch7 Před 18 dny +2

    Thanks Taryl, and Mr. Cameraman, that was loads of fun!

  • @karlschwab6437
    @karlschwab6437 Před 16 dny +1

    What a great experiment! I love it!

  • @markbarrett2225
    @markbarrett2225 Před 18 dny

    Great find! Thanks guys!

  • @mikegrimaldi5844
    @mikegrimaldi5844 Před 18 dny +3

    Excellent test! You are a good mechanic that does beyond just fixing stuff. I recall your fuel additive test between different formulations using the same engine model. Who does that? You.

  • @iMacMan54
    @iMacMan54 Před 18 dny +8

    Maybe Doc Neon could make a more modern version from the newer transformer......do a head to head test which works "better".

  • @deplorableb.r.4211
    @deplorableb.r.4211 Před 18 dny +1

    That's really cool. Thanks Doc Neon for the help!!!

  • @The762x39mm
    @The762x39mm Před 18 dny +2

    Awesome tool!

  • @therobbins41406
    @therobbins41406 Před 18 dny +5

    Such a cool little invention for the time, great video taryl

    • @stevebrueggen800
      @stevebrueggen800 Před 18 dny

      Sunday breakfast at Tiffany’s can’t hold a candle to Sunday breakfast with Taryl. Interesting and entertaining. Thanks Taryl. 👍

    • @carlmorgan8452
      @carlmorgan8452 Před 18 dny

      Anytime 😊

  • @Chico-td2fy
    @Chico-td2fy Před 18 dny +7

    Man. Imagine the money Skippy would save if he had that. 😂 ⚡️⚡️⚡️ Taryl would have to close due to lack of spark plug sales 😂

  • @mattclark5480
    @mattclark5480 Před 18 dny +1

    Thanks for the video guys. That’s a good one 👍

  • @odin823
    @odin823 Před 3 dny

    i want to play with it. the spark tester. great find. thanx for sharing.

  • @josephlopez6114
    @josephlopez6114 Před 18 dny +5

    Amazing

  • @NebukedNezzer
    @NebukedNezzer Před 18 dny +4

    current matters also. I once had a webster ignition transformer off a gun type oil burner for hot water house heater. it put our 10000 volts at .023 amps. it would burn crud off spark plugs as well as lots of stuff. it will not fix things like cracked porciline insulator. but will burn off fouling. good idea. I have used a propane torch to burn fouling off plugs.

  • @MrOiluj52
    @MrOiluj52 Před 18 dny +2

    Cleaned a lot of plugs in the 60/70's with a sand blaster plug cleaner with good results.
    One neat thing about the neon tester is the visual conformation the plugs are usable. Specifically for those old flat head engines that run on the rich side. 👏

  • @chrishotrod6603
    @chrishotrod6603 Před 18 dny +2

    That is very cool tool.

  • @brianfloyd8033
    @brianfloyd8033 Před 18 dny +3

    That's awesome

  • @alfredocuomo1546
    @alfredocuomo1546 Před 18 dny +10

    He used a Neon sign transformer but the difference between them is one is 7.5kv at maybe half an amp while the warmer was 15kv but with almost no amperage. The voltage causes the arc but the Amperage does the cooking.

  • @Ballroomblitz255
    @Ballroomblitz255 Před 18 dny +3

    Reminds me of the old proverb "Necessity is the mother of invention”…….someone was curious enough to build a mousetrap and while it doesn’t have a commercial value seeing plugs are a disposable product at $4 each, nonetheless an ingenious and simple contraption to solve a problem. Cheers.

    • @Watchyn_Yarwood
      @Watchyn_Yarwood Před 17 dny

      It definitely had a value back in the 50s and 60s when people fixed things instead of throwing them away like we do today. Why? Because they had to. We wore jeans with patches, not as a fashion statement, but because we couldn't afford to run out and buy a new pair. Winter's long sleeve shirts became summer's short sleeve shirts. We, and I include myself, are spoiled.

  • @dougmills9763
    @dougmills9763 Před 16 dny

    Awesome demonstration!

  • @bradleynevills4444
    @bradleynevills4444 Před 18 dny

    That's awesome great find

  • @BearE9090
    @BearE9090 Před 18 dny +3

    Bizzare, tester to repair plug. Quick easy way to get rid of the carbon build-up. Great find.

  • @shepardsinsequence
    @shepardsinsequence Před 18 dny +8

    Tarly…. These mysteries and oddities are very scary 😢

  • @MegaVortex
    @MegaVortex Před 17 dny +1

    Another amazing video!!!

  • @brucedye576
    @brucedye576 Před 18 dny

    Some pretty cool pioneer engineering great content

  • @bruceferrero8178
    @bruceferrero8178 Před 18 dny +3

    Very cool homemade unit! Champion makes one for aviation spark plugs. It tests under pressure to determine if the plug will fire. Tester is very expensive, but so are aircraft spark plugs.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 18 dny +2

      Air is an insulator. Pressurized air is even more insulative. There's just more molecules in the way. Which is why you can test a plug out of an engine and get a spark but the plug still won't fire in the engine.

    • @bruceferrero8178
      @bruceferrero8178 Před 18 dny

      @@1pcfred yep!

    • @brandonstclair6530
      @brandonstclair6530 Před 17 dny

      @@1pcfredI’ve had that happen to me before, spark outside the engine but no spark when installed. You can argue this till the cows come with people on forum and no one will listen.

    • @amberjack1234
      @amberjack1234 Před 17 dny

      @@1pcfred Yep. and that is the truth.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 17 dny

      @@brandonstclair6530 what usually causes no spark in the cylinder usually isn't the plug itself though. The spark plug just sparks. The rest of the ignition system is what makes the spark. It's also what creates the strength of the spark too.

  • @user-yj7yn4fi4l
    @user-yj7yn4fi4l Před 18 dny +6

    Need to label it to indicate use, then a Taryl Fixes All sticker.
    Maybe a future episode, you and Doc Neon could build a more modern, safer version.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 18 dny

      Maybe if you could make it with a lid that had safety interlocks it could be safe? But at a certain voltage and current you're dealing with a high hazard if there's any way for that current to go into a victim.

  • @asimplehorseman4648
    @asimplehorseman4648 Před 17 dny +1

    You guys are the best!!!

  • @NovaBill6264
    @NovaBill6264 Před 18 dny

    Awesome video God Bless you and your family Amen

  • @57monoshock
    @57monoshock Před 18 dny +6

    Spark plug burner offer machine.

  • @n8BDetroit
    @n8BDetroit Před 18 dny +3

    Good morning grass rats! 🎉

  • @kylemishoe6963
    @kylemishoe6963 Před 18 dny

    That is amazing I would love to have one of these.

  • @jimmytate7587
    @jimmytate7587 Před 16 dny +1

    over 60 years ago i worked in a garage where we had one of these things. we also had a plug cleaner which used baking soda for an abrasive. we seldom had to replace plugs. the omly pligs we replaced were ones with cracked ceramic insulators. mechanics do not test plugs anymore because the cost detracts from profit. these are also used to test igniters on diesel fueled steam boilers.

  • @crossthreading8157
    @crossthreading8157 Před 18 dny +13

    Guy that built that probably got a visit from the spark plug makers……you know the story.

    • @carlmorgan8452
      @carlmorgan8452 Před 18 dny +1

      Exactly 🎯

    • @rogerzepp1044
      @rogerzepp1044 Před 18 dny +2

      No doubt Champion or AC probably bought the patent from this guy

    • @briang4470
      @briang4470 Před 18 dny +1

      Big spark plug got him, never to be seen again.

    • @jayytee8062
      @jayytee8062 Před 18 dny +2

      Nope. Spark plug testers were around long ago in the early days.
      So were spark plug cleaning machines.
      It's just we are reaching peak stupidity currently and people marvel at the most simple things as if they had just come out of a 70 year coma.

    • @crossthreading8157
      @crossthreading8157 Před 18 dny

      @@jayytee8062 True. My grandfather had an old vixen in his shop. Never knew what happened to it after he passed.

  • @georgecooke9010
    @georgecooke9010 Před 15 dny +3

    TARYL, ILL BUILD YOU A 80KV SETUP AND SEND THAT TO YOU AT MY EXPENSE BECAUSE I LIKE YOU AND YOUR STUFF IS COOL. IT WILL PROBABLY MELT THE ELECTRODES IF YOU YOU LAY INTO IT BUT IT WILL BE FUN. I USE THAT SETUP FOR JACOBS LADDERS BUT IT USES 2 IGNITION COILS AND A LAMP DIMMER TO CONTROL THE VOLTAGE OUTPUT. IT WILL SPARK 3 - 4" SO A PLG GAP WILL SIZZLE THEN MELT. IT WILL BE ADJUSTABLE OUTPUT BUT ABOUT 40KV ON THE LOW SETTING. I COULD MAKE A 20 - 40KV MODEL IF THAT WOULD SUIT YOU BETTER. SAY THE WORD AND YOU'LL GET MY HOME MADE VERSION TO COMPARE. IN A JACOBS LATTER SETUP YOU CAN PULL6" ARCS. FUN!

  • @BoBBoB-su5yl
    @BoBBoB-su5yl Před 17 dny

    Taryl, this was a really interesting video. It got me to thinking. My background is in law enforcement so I've gotna littlebexperience with stun guns. They have a test mode where you press the button on the side and press the button on the side and a spark jumps between the electrodes.
    It seems that with a little manufacturing and sodering you could rin wiring from the electrodes to the spark plug and make one that runs off a 9 volt transistor radio battery.
    Easy to make and no 120 volt power supply making it light and portable. Just a thought and maybe you might want to build one and make a video.
    Love you videos.

  • @kiljoy54
    @kiljoy54 Před 18 dny +1

    That was awesome 😮

  • @USMC-Sniper-0137
    @USMC-Sniper-0137 Před 14 dny +3

    SPARK PLUG SAND BLASTER vs. that PLUG TESTER/FIXER!!!! I believe that super high voltage is just sizzling the dirt and debris until it's cleaned. You can visually see it getting cleaned and know when to stop....I think that is a PLUG CLEANER w/o using sand........ Nothing cleaner than a flame to clean a sparkplug......

  • @froggerman44
    @froggerman44 Před 18 dny +3

    I think I need one, maybe u should make some?

    • @astroboy5137
      @astroboy5137 Před 18 dny

      How many people need a spark plug checker? I trash the old one & replace it with a new one. The electric it uses costs more than a new plug.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 18 dny

      @@astroboy5137 this device would use very little electricity. The downside here is risk and liability. You can buy a lot of new plugs for what a human life is worth.

  • @UPfreelancerailroad
    @UPfreelancerailroad Před 8 dny

    Thats awesome, great video

  • @jimmonte9826
    @jimmonte9826 Před 17 dny +1

    I have done that with a more basic setup. Regarding the old vs new transformer, as long as there is enough voltage to spark, no more is needed. To make such a cleaner better, what you need more of (and what also makes it less safe) is current. The current causes heating that burns off the junk. You can also use a torch to heat the plug. It is the same basic idea, just a different approach. However, the transformer has the advantage that the appearance of the spark tells you when the plug is clean enough. As was pointed out in the video, the transformer cleans and tests.

  • @troy3052
    @troy3052 Před 18 dny +3

    Any time i come across equipment with a Torch spark plug, i immediately replace it

    • @muddywater6856
      @muddywater6856 Před 18 dny

      I have only seen them on Chinese stuff.
      Ebay tune up kits😂

    • @stevethegreasemonkey
      @stevethegreasemonkey Před 18 dny +1

      Same with me. I work repairing lawnmowers in Northumberland England

  • @velvanae
    @velvanae Před 18 dny +9

    I'm with many of the guys on here. Join forces with Doc Neon and make one from a torpedo heater transformer. That way we can make our own safely.

    • @donbower2438
      @donbower2438 Před 18 dny +3

      I agree I would like to make one from a torpedo heater transformer to "fix" 2 cycle fouled plugs.

    • @brucebennett5759
      @brucebennett5759 Před 17 dny +1

      If you are only doing a plug once in a while, can't you clamp the fuel hose and just put the fouled plug in the torpedo heater?
      If I were testing plugs every day, I would set up a little more permanently, but the box Taryl has is a pretty good example.(It ain't the Space Shuttle...😊)

  • @MB-xq3ol
    @MB-xq3ol Před 5 dny

    YOU ARE THE MAN

  • @modoc852
    @modoc852 Před 18 dny

    Pretty neat job of making that tester whoever made it, most people would just slap something together made of wood. I used an old telegrapher’s coil to test a fouled plug then I’d sand blast the carbon off and reuse the plug or plugs because they would become oil and carbon fouled again in a month or so. This sort of demonstrates how HEI helps to burn off the carbon deposits from a high mileage engine that is burning oil. You can take any carbon fouled spark plug sandblast it clean and it will work like new, just be sure to blow out any sand down inside it and make sure it’s clean. You might be able to make one of these testers using a ballast out of a fluorescent light fixture. I’m gonna say that this tester was probably factory made just because anyone operating a busy repair shop wouldn’t have the time to make one this detailed, but that’s my two centavos worth.

    • @merlesgarage
      @merlesgarage Před 17 dny +1

      I like your creative thinking! Unfortunately, the ballasts out of fluorescent fixtures are going to be quite a bit less than 1000 volts, most are 300v - 400v. That won't be enough to jump the gap. If someone is looking to make one of these, neon transformers are still available. There are also spark ignitors for commercial furnaces, especially older oil burners. If you want a lot of current, the transformer from a microwave oven will give the most. I've used each of these in fractal burning in wood. It never, ever dawned on me to try this for sparkplug cleaning... until now. I have a sparkplug sandblaster, and I've used the propane torch method, but now I want to build one of these! This is a brilliant idea! Thanks, Taryl and Doc for sharing this with us all.

    • @modoc852
      @modoc852 Před 15 dny

      @@merlesgarage I still prefer to beadblast fouled plugs that way there isn’t a way for the arc to follow a path through the built up carbon instead of jumping the gap.

  • @soulless9991
    @soulless9991 Před 18 dny +2

    Great taryl❤

  • @martinaudet7687
    @martinaudet7687 Před 18 dny

    The circuit diagram was probably published in a circa 1950's electronics magazine. There wouldn't be too many around. maybe you could offer the customer an option of rejuvenating their plug for a lower cost than a replacement, but sell them a replacement anyway as you cannot offer them any real guarantee. A bit silly, but it's a thought. Love the video's Taryl. keep 'em coming.

  • @Michel-Artois
    @Michel-Artois Před 15 dny

    It's an homemade spark plug tester and also carbon cleaner , intestesting and clever! Before testing I always clean the plug as best as possible with a heatgun with max heat amost touching the plug, and fine metal brush and others , to eliminate dirt and conductive carbon on both electrodes , specially the inside one....and many plugs are not really dead but simply half shorted by carbon as you show it in your video.
    But it's not the final solution, we must find and modify if possible the reason why the plug was so carboned and dirty (air filter, carb screws regulation, bad piston rings etc...) A good plug with always light brown colour can spark a lot of years if ceramic has no issue. A spark plug can be defective, but sometimes (often?) it's no plug issue but motor issue. My little engines (not very often used, like by many users) run perfectly since...30 years with the same plug .

  • @billgolcher2537
    @billgolcher2537 Před 17 dny +1

    Man that's amazing

  • @stevezio99
    @stevezio99 Před 18 dny

    Pretty cool Taryl thank you for the entertaining content.

  • @robbiterry38
    @robbiterry38 Před 17 dny

    now that os cool, love watching from kansas, keep up the cool vids....

  • @W1RMD
    @W1RMD Před 12 dny

    Awesome idea! It should be noted (as you said) in the video that these transformers are MUCH higher current than ignition coils! I know of an oil burner tech who was nearly killed when the little old lay who owned the house of the furnace he was working on saw that the oil burner switch was off and decided to turn it on. He should have shut off the breaker (obviously). He sustained several substantial permanent injuries as a result. Even the sign transformer is capable of lighting up a 100 watt (or so) sign.

  • @rods6405
    @rods6405 Před 17 dny

    Neat box! Those plugs just needed cleaning! Back in 1997 worked in service station repair shop (gas station) we had a spark plug cleaner that sand blasted the plugs with compress air! 28:17 That sparking you can see on the left of the plug (top) is from the neck cord either moisture in it or human skin they conduct very well!

  • @Atomsinaction-uk3jw
    @Atomsinaction-uk3jw Před 14 dny

    So many things weren’t commercially available, years ago. I love how the older generation built what they needed. Thanks for sharing!!

  • @mikenonameneeded3485
    @mikenonameneeded3485 Před 15 dny +1

    In the 1990’s my friends dad made one of those from a bug zapper transformer. I remember him saying it would fix a spark plug by burning off all the crap on it. Smart dude he was

  • @raymonster55
    @raymonster55 Před 18 dny +1

    I think people used to have better knowledge of basic science than they do today. My friends used to do some interesting things in their bedrooms when they were kids, like make their own tesla coils and jacob's ladders. I have also used a torch to burn off carbon buildup on fouled plugs. Great video! I hope that you get some information on that gadget. It looks like one of those products that big business would try to eliminate.

  • @dalitohana6979
    @dalitohana6979 Před 16 dny

    Awesome!!!!

  • @thekingsilverado3266
    @thekingsilverado3266 Před 15 dny

    I came across a device just like that when I was in my teens there was this abandoned Oldsmobile dealership way on the outskirts near Allentown. The dealership was being worked on at the time as that was how I got there to start demo work with a guy that hired me. The place was closed up since the mid 1950's the owner had passed away. There were even cars inside which the new owner covered em up. He was a car collector and we quickly became friends because I liked to race at the time. So that thing is ancient and the guy that made it is probably no longer with us. Outside of the one I got to play with there it was a green tube transformer made by Magnetic Windings Co. Easton Pa. The old timers knew their poop too I guess. The thing is rare never saw another one until now. The same family owns the place to this day they restore cars there now in their spare time.

  • @sandrosbackyard343
    @sandrosbackyard343 Před 18 dny

    As always Taryl, great acting and awesome little spark plug tester you got yourself there!

  • @scorcher617
    @scorcher617 Před 18 dny

    I still have a spark plug sandblaster on side of my bench hasn’t been used in over 30 years but still working, needed this as a kid would have saved me in so many ways . Might look homemade but that’s how things were built and came back then I came across tons of that stuff when I started working at families Gm dealership in the 80s they were old dealer tools.

  • @W1RMD
    @W1RMD Před 12 dny +2

    Today's free advice: When testing an electrical device, always put a light bulb in series like a fuse and if there is a short the bulb will light up instead of the wiring. You can do this with 12 volt and 120 volt circuits. Changing the bulb value will limit the current. If your testing something like a large motor, use a large bulb like 500 or 1000 watts or even an electric heater. An old radio or tv, a 60 or 100 watt bulb. I've used an old headlight bulb with 12 volt circuits. Thanks for all of the great videos and making us laugh!

  • @Saved_The_Day
    @Saved_The_Day Před 17 dny +1

    That homemade tester is probably putting out way more voltage than a small engine. You should test the difference between the tester and a small engine Taryl. Love the Mysteries and Oddities videos!! Thank you!

  • @wizrom3046
    @wizrom3046 Před dnem

    Spark plug cleaners were a thing back in the day.
    A friend had one from the 1970s which was a 6 inch long plastic tube fillled with very thin but hard steel rods, like long needles.
    You put a spoonful of gasoline in there, then screwed the plug in the end of the tube and shook it vigorously with your hand. The tiny needles cleaned the end of the plug and inside the plug on the cone, then your pour out the dirty gasoline and the plug has the carbon removed and works like a new one.

  • @poolhalljunkie9
    @poolhalljunkie9 Před 3 dny

    I love that foot starter. 😂😂

  • @ralphwatten2426
    @ralphwatten2426 Před 18 dny +1

    I wish I had one of those machines when I was messing with my Chev 283. I was fouling plugs all the time trying to get the jetting right. Nice one Taryl. And there's my brunch.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 18 dny +1

      I had an engine with a trashed bore that I kept running for a while. What helped was platinum plugs. Platinum won't foul easily.

    • @ralphwatten2426
      @ralphwatten2426 Před 17 dny

      @@1pcfred It was in 1977. I built a 283 to a 302 with a steel crank, power pack heads, 11.25:1 compression and a Holley spread bore double pumper 650 cfm, I think it was the r6210. I jetted and I jetted and I fouled plugs and fouled plugs. Then it ran different when it was winter. I mixed low lead av gas with unleaded premium and I ran 93 no lead premium. I had lots of fun with it but I fouled 10s of spark plugs. Wouldn't it be just great to just plug the dirty ones into that machine and not buy new ones or have to try to clean them by hand. Yep, another great video by the great Taryl Dactyl! P.S. They may have had Champion Copper Plus back then but I doubt if there were Platinum.

    • @1pcfred
      @1pcfred Před 17 dny

      @@ralphwatten2426 I think they'd known about platinum with plugs for a long time but they weren't well known. It was very much an obscure thing. In my experience it absolutely worked. The plug would be black and all gunked up but that little spot of platinum would be clean.

  • @jeeper426
    @jeeper426 Před 18 dny +2

    likely built by some old tractor mechanic working on farmall tractors, i've seen similar things built but not quite to that level of professionalism and quality, most were sketchy things like nails driven into a 2x4 screwed to the base of the neon sign transformer with a wire wrapped around a nail for the plug to sit against, then either a plug wire or boot end on a piece of wire run from the other terminal of the transformer to "clip" onto the spark plug, that thing is quite well built and well thought out

  • @shawnmarvin6348
    @shawnmarvin6348 Před 18 dny

    Very cool!

  • @corywaring7124
    @corywaring7124 Před 18 dny

    Another great video, I would love to see these two genius (Taryl and whoever made this device) make a video together.

  • @JoeThurman-bi3sk
    @JoeThurman-bi3sk Před 18 dny

    That was super cool.