I just saw a short where he started a big diesel truck in -3° weather and he specifically said "no glow plugs" so I came here to find out what the heck that was! You're super succinct and I really appreciate the info!
I’ve mainly worked with Gas Engines, but since I’ll be going to the military which uses a lot of diesels, I would love to learn all I can about diesel engines.
Fantastic! I am the person who knew nothing about it so I very much appreciate the explanation and the demonstration. I must subscribe to your channel coz this type of quality teaching is the best!!
Great video. You're very good at this - taking the time to even make us complete novices understand. We have a Toyota Hilux/Vigo 2.5D, but really all I know about it is that it has a steering wheel, some pedals, and needs diesel to run... so yeah, on that level... Thanks!
Cheers from Saudi Arabia, Best crystal clear explanation about glow plug vs spark plug. Thanks for your effort and time. I really don't know why the heck some ministries of education miss these RUclipsrs, they should hire them and double salary them instead of some arrogant and ignorant teachers ! My youngest brother is a diesel mechanic, he's gonna love this video :)
i loved the vid. i learned so much today on how they both operate. thank u soo much. i appreciate the time u invested in to showing and making this video. much respect. God bless..
Awesome thanks man! Starting my automotive engineering apprenticeship and these videos are awesome for us people that don't know every little thing about motors haha thanks again man!
thank you..i had problems with starting in the mornings.checked glow plugs like in the video..one was taking too long to glow.changed all 4 and problem solved..thank you.
Nice glow plug demo ! I've an '82 300TD..Always wanted to know what the plug actually looks like when activated.. Also, for your viewers: If you drive a diesel too, once engine is warm and you say, go shopping for an hour, say. When you go to restart the car do not wait for glow plug panel light to go on and off. Just turn the key immediately. Otherwise you're just wearing out the glow plug life sooner..IE. They are not needed once engine is warm..But, say, 4 hrs has past, THEN, yes, re-employ the glow plugs...
Good job, when i was a kid even my auto teacher didnt know the difference, now that i have 20 plus years in the diesel field, i still have people coming up to me thinking glow plugs are for ignition
A glow plug in the small hobby R/C world, such as a Traxxis T-Maxx, will sort of look like a spark plug (not a stick) and will have a wire coil that runs inside that looks like a spring. And is way smaller in size like a little bigger than a lego head piece... Most of my starting issues for the T-Maxx were not glow plug related, but was just a complete mystery. Maybe clogged up carb. Most likely ya... I have learned tons more about smaller motors when working in landscaping than I ever have about hobby help docs to troubleshoot your T-Maxx that fails to start.
hey man that was a really clear way of explaining it, I'm confident with petrol but never worked or needed to learn a diesel, how about a video of explaining why a diesel engine has that distinct rattle noise over an equal sized petrol engine would be good to learn
Some aircraft jet engines use glow plugs in whats called hot surface ignition however most use spark, In a jet engine the spark plug is much bigger in size and produces a much hotter arc, Jet fuel is a fuel oil that is a cousin to number 1 household kerosene and is not easily ignited without it being heated, compressed or atomized first
When I lived in Germany in the 70's a friend had a Mercedes 190 diesel. I remember in the winter time he had to go out and turn on the glow plug and wait several mins before he could start the car. I always thought that was extremely inconvenient.
Good work, keep it up. I have a problem with one of the glow plugs, there is a leak from between the treads, is there a way to solve this? Thanks again for the well explained video.
Bigger trackers i work on dont have glow plugs or grids. Some might have either start but no one replaces the either cans. Most in cold weather areas have block heaters to plug in 120 volt to keep the coolant system warm.
Very good video thanks for all the information about the glow plugs. I just have a question about it. how do i test the glow plugs I don't want to replace em all if I don't have to it's a ford 6.0 2006 if you can help me out i will appreciate it
something for a rule of thumb i have found, anyone with experience building engines (and actually knows what they're talking about) you have two arrows. one up and one down and two factors, compression resistence and compression ratio. petrol needs up resistance down ratio, diesel is inverse. just by factor on how they work, diesels need more compression ratio petrol's do not.
I live in Australia and have a diesel BMW X5 e70. On the coldest days in winter it will get to 10 degrees Celsius. My question is are the glow plugs needed in my case?
thank you for the informative demo. can we do the same testing experiment at home by placing the glow plug between bricks and the trying to connect the positive of a battery through a wire, holding the wire with a plier? will this be safe?
Glow plug questions! 1) I've heard it said that if you try to start an engine before the glow plug light turns off you could damage a plug. Why? 2) If you have (already) started an engine while the glow plug light was not off is there any correct procedure to move forward to lessen any damage? Thank you for this informative video.
Thank you for simplifying it! Question, what is the "life-expectancy" of glow plugs on a vehicle? I know for hondas the tune interval is 105K miles.. do glow plugs last the same? Thank you for your time.
Very useful - thank you. May I ask - is it possible for a faulty glow plug to trigger the service light (Car/Spanner icon) after starting from cold and driving only a mile, but then be OK after stopping and re-starting the car immediately? The Garage diagnostics shows nothing, but I did a "pedal check" and got a flashing sequence of 6342 on the engine warning light (engine icon) which, according to various vauxhall/opel forums translates to fault as "H02S Heater Control Circuit Low (Bank 2 Sensor 3)" & also quotes P0683-04 "Glow-Plug Circuit Open". My car is a 2007 Corsa 1.3 CDTI with 48000 miles on the clock. The car drives fine and shows no physical driving problems at all; it has just had a 48000 mile service. I'd be very grateful for your expertise and advice - thank you.
This is very very very helpful for me! Thanks mister! by the way, we just changed the glow plug in our diesel engine car.. but sometimes the engine wont start normally. can you answer me what might be the cause? is it on the battery? or maybe there are wires that are connected from the battery to the engine?(broken wiring i think?)
Thanks for the video , I have a question my tractor is a 3 cylinder diesel and after about an hour it will shut down ,what clue can you give me for that reason? Thanks!
Good stuff, I have a toyota caldina wagon 2200cc diesel engine, so if i'm changing the glow plugs do i just buy any or there are specif ones that I should get? So ive never changed any of the plugs ever. I'm having trouble starting the engine.
I figured out what glow plugs were long ago, when I was learning about gasoline engines, and what causes detonation/knock/preignition, and how to prevent that. An air/fuel mixture exploding from just being squeezed, that should never happen in a gasoline engine. An air/fuel mix igniting, not because of the spark plugs & their timing, may damage the gasoline engine. Detonation/knock & preignition, may not only happen, because the octane rating of the gasoline, is too low, but also if it's a very hot day, and there is something wrong with the cooling system. So I figured, since Diesel engines rely on the compression strokes, to create enough heat to ignite the diesel fuel. Glow plugs, must be things that heat up the engine, when it's too cold for that to work...and I was right. And the word GLOW, was also a big clue. It reminded me of the heating elements in a toaster oven. This is a very good video. Thank you for showing a glow plug.
I went to an automotive school, but I don't remember that much about Diesel engines, because they were briefly mentioned, and when learning about the 4 stroke cycle, we focused on gasoline engines. But what I did hear about Diesel engines freaks me out. Diesel engines have much higher compression ratios then cars, they don't use spark plugs, they control when the diesel ignites, by squirting it into the cylinders, at an EVEN GREATER pressure. This is why the fuel lines for Diesel engines, are made of thicker metal, then gasoline engines. The diesel fuel is at such great pressure, that if there was a pinhole leak in the fuel lines, and you waved your hand over it, the diesel will cut into your hand, and diesel in your blood will kill you. This is why Diesel engines creep me out. Especially if they were in a crash, and are still running.
I've been running my gasoline generator on kerosene like really pure k1 kerosene And when I turn the engine switch off (the spark plug should stop making sparks) the engine stays on just because of the compression lmao I have to choke it and turn off the fuel line and It seems like no damage
@@Tsifdgoyddo I was talking about working on a Diesel engine, after a crash, or diagnosing it while it's running. I'm worried about a hole in the fuel lines, because of that, or sabotage. But I'm loyal to EVs now, and building Electric motorcycles now. But Diesels still creep me out, for those reasons
Hello, Please help me! Why does the warning exclamation light comes on in my Focus MK2 1.6TDCI and this triggers a limp mode? will changing the Glowplugs eliminate this?
The "have a safe day" got me. Anyone can have a good day, but not many are safe through out it. Good shit
A trick : you can watch movies on Flixzone. I've been using it for watching lots of of movies these days.
@Ahmed Ryan Yea, have been using Flixzone} for months myself :)
I just saw a short where he started a big diesel truck in -3° weather and he specifically said "no glow plugs" so I came here to find out what the heck that was! You're super succinct and I really appreciate the info!
I’ve mainly worked with Gas Engines, but since I’ll be going to the military which uses a lot of diesels, I would love to learn all I can about diesel engines.
I don't work with Amy engines but I'm an aspiring mechanic so I'll learn anything I can about engines
Extremely informative for a beginner! I thought this was the case anyway but this clarified. Thank you.
Fantastic! I am the person who knew nothing about it so I very much appreciate the explanation and the demonstration. I must subscribe to your channel coz this type of quality teaching is the best!!
Great video. You're very good at this - taking the time to even make us complete novices understand. We have a Toyota Hilux/Vigo 2.5D, but really all I know about it is that it has a steering wheel, some pedals, and needs diesel to run... so yeah, on that level... Thanks!
You confirmed my understanding of the difference. Thanks for a simple explanation and demonstration.
Cheers from Saudi Arabia,
Best crystal clear explanation about glow plug vs spark plug. Thanks for your effort and time.
I really don't know why the heck some ministries of education miss these RUclipsrs, they should hire them and double salary them instead of some arrogant and ignorant teachers !
My youngest brother is a diesel mechanic, he's gonna love this video :)
In Saudi Arabia, does it ever get cold enough that a diesel engine needs glowplugs to start?
@@bartholomausallen883
yeah, we have sub zero zones, and it snows up north.
Dear Sir,
Thank you very much for taking the time to produce such an informative video. It was very educational.
Finally a RUclips video that I can respect. Good job!
i loved the vid. i learned so much today on how they both operate. thank u soo much. i appreciate the time u invested in to showing and making this video. much respect. God bless..
Awesome thanks man! Starting my automotive engineering apprenticeship and these videos are awesome for us people that don't know every little thing about motors haha thanks again man!
thank you..i had problems with starting in the mornings.checked glow plugs like in the video..one was taking too long to glow.changed all 4 and problem solved..thank you.
Explanation with demonstration is the right equation!! Excellent video. Thumbs way up!
You are a great teacher, just got my first diesel, thanks
Nice glow plug demo !
I've an '82 300TD..Always wanted to know what the plug actually looks like when activated..
Also, for your viewers: If you drive a diesel too, once engine is warm and you say, go shopping for an hour, say. When you go to restart the car do not wait for glow plug panel light to go on and off. Just turn the key immediately. Otherwise you're just wearing out the glow plug life sooner..IE. They are not needed once engine is warm..But, say, 4 hrs has past, THEN, yes, re-employ the glow plugs...
This really explains what's difference for the two! Really learned a lot! First knowledge of cars!
This video is awesomely clear and educative. Now I know. Thanks big.
Great video. I know gas engines very well, and am trying to learn diesel, this really cleared up the function of glow plugs.
Sr. I take my hat off. You are a great teacher.
You just earned a subscriber, keep posting informative videos, you explain in a very simple manner, i enjoyed the video
dip that in your cold coffee and quickly enjoy a hot cup of coffee.
LOL
Genius!
Thanks that was a spot on lesson. Just about to buy a diesel with a glow plug fault which I fear no more. Cheers.
Direct and right to the point. Enjoy it ! Thanks !
Super nice explanation and easy to understand. Please try to make more videos about engine in same way of explanation. Thanks
Fantastic video. Very informational and very easy to follow. Best video I've seen.
Your explanation was easy to understand. Greatly appreciated!
Cracking, straight to the pint explanation.
Thank you bro.
great explanation, did help me understand the significance and usage of glow plug
Good job, when i was a kid even my auto teacher didnt know the difference, now that i have 20 plus years in the diesel field, i still have people coming up to me thinking glow plugs are for ignition
very good video...thanks for sharing glow plug knowledge russel. ...keep posting such good videos
never understood how glowplugs worked well explained vid!
Thanks for the video and explanation.
As someone who has just bought their first diesel engine vehicle I found this very useful.
Thanks and subbed. 👍
Awesome & simple explanation !
. Can you please make a video about the differences between the Gasoline & Diesel engine . Thanks in advance
Thank you. So we should wait for the "coil" light to go off before starting a diesel engine?
Yes I would.
A glow plug in the small hobby R/C world, such as a Traxxis T-Maxx, will sort of look like a spark plug (not a stick) and will have a wire coil that runs inside that looks like a spring. And is way smaller in size like a little bigger than a lego head piece... Most of my starting issues for the T-Maxx were not glow plug related, but was just a complete mystery. Maybe clogged up carb. Most likely ya...
I have learned tons more about smaller motors when working in landscaping than I ever have about hobby help docs to troubleshoot your T-Maxx that fails to start.
Good vid, I learned something today! Thanks for that :-)
+Michael St John Thats great thanks!
sir its amazing , today i learned smething very informative and interesting .thanks you very much....
Everyone likes the excellent explanations but none subscribed? Not fair
Excellent video, thanks for this!
hey man that was a really clear way of explaining it, I'm confident with petrol but never worked or needed to learn a diesel, how about a video of explaining why a diesel engine has that distinct rattle noise over an equal sized petrol engine would be good to learn
Wow I never even knew that these existed. I thought that all engines apart from Jet Engines used Spark plugs. The more you know! Thanks for this!
Some aircraft jet engines use glow plugs in whats called hot surface ignition however most use spark, In a jet engine the spark plug is much bigger in size and produces a much hotter arc, Jet fuel is a fuel oil that is a cousin to number 1 household kerosene and is not easily ignited without it being heated, compressed or atomized first
Ken Arbuckle Aye. I watch a show on Air Craft crashes, and one crash was caused by a malfunctioning Combustion Can.
Yes and the jet fuel is basically diesel/kerosene fuel
thanks for that thorough explanation
Great explanation and demonstration
Thank You very much Sir!!!
Very Nice 👌 Video!!!
You're a good Guy!!!
Good video, thank you for explaining it so well, and displaying the function! MUST WATCH VIDEO
You showed the glow plugs working, but could have maybe added spark plugs being tested in HT leads too for people to know how to test bad plugs.
When I lived in Germany in the 70's a friend had a Mercedes 190 diesel. I remember in the winter time he had to go out and turn on the glow plug and wait several mins before he could start the car. I always thought that was extremely inconvenient.
Nicely explained the glow plug & spark plug, thanks.
Glow plugs interesting. I didn't know diesel engine has those
Very well explained, thanks dieselworld!
that was a fantastic amazing video search keep up the good work
Thanks!
Thanks for posting. That was very informative.
thanks I learnt something new ....
Great!
this was very knowledgable, why do they keep burning out. say we have to change every 2 weeks
thx great video. clear and concise.
Good work, keep it up. I have a problem with one of the glow plugs, there is a leak from between the treads, is there a way to solve this? Thanks again for the well explained video.
Very simple and useful. Thank you!
Nice video man cheers. Never seen that before. 👍🏻
Bigger trackers i work on dont have glow plugs or grids. Some might have either start but no one replaces the either cans. Most in cold weather areas have block heaters to plug in 120 volt to keep the coolant system warm.
Very enlightening video. Thanks.
Hey thanks for the video! I have a question, what's really the difference between a "cheap" glowplug and an expensive one?
Very good video thanks for all the information about the glow plugs. I just have a question about it. how do i test the glow plugs I don't want to replace em all if I don't have to it's a ford 6.0 2006 if you can help me out i will appreciate it
Thank you, that was very helpful!
How is EGR helpful and what type of engine it is used in? Could to please make a video on it?
That was excellent. Now, do you do one for the glow plug switch? I have a 1996 GMC Suburban Diesel and it may be out, or I have faulty glow plugs.
Thank you for the knowledge 🙏
Cool demonstration. Thanks.
Excellent explanation video....thxxxx
something for a rule of thumb i have found, anyone with experience building engines (and actually knows what they're talking about) you have two arrows. one up and one down and two factors, compression resistence and compression ratio. petrol needs up resistance down ratio, diesel is inverse. just by factor on how they work, diesels need more compression ratio petrol's do not.
I am the 89001 Viewer..;) bTW very informative video...
Very informative video...thank you
I live in Australia and have a diesel BMW X5 e70. On the coldest days in winter it will get to 10 degrees Celsius. My question is are the glow plugs needed in my case?
thank you for the informative demo. can we do the same testing experiment at home by placing the glow plug between bricks and the trying to connect the positive of a battery through a wire, holding the wire with a plier? will this be safe?
Thank you very much , it helped me greatly to understand
Glow plug questions!
1) I've heard it said that if you try to start an engine before the glow
plug light turns off you could damage a plug. Why?
2) If you have (already) started an engine while the glow plug light was
not off is there any correct procedure to move forward to lessen any
damage?
Thank you for this informative video.
No it will not in any way damage the plug.
I prefer the diesels without glowplugs.
Thank you for simplifying it! Question, what is the "life-expectancy" of glow plugs on a vehicle? I know for hondas the tune interval is 105K miles.. do glow plugs last the same? Thank you for your time.
That's incredible. Thank you
Very useful - thank you. May I ask - is it possible for a faulty glow plug to trigger the service light (Car/Spanner icon) after starting from cold and driving only a mile, but then be OK after stopping and re-starting the car immediately? The Garage diagnostics shows nothing, but I did a "pedal check" and got a flashing sequence of 6342 on the engine warning light (engine icon) which, according to various vauxhall/opel forums translates to fault as "H02S Heater Control Circuit Low (Bank 2 Sensor 3)" & also quotes P0683-04 "Glow-Plug Circuit Open". My car is a 2007 Corsa 1.3 CDTI with 48000 miles on the clock. The car drives fine and shows no physical driving problems at all; it has just had a 48000 mile service. I'd be very grateful for your expertise and advice - thank you.
This is very very very helpful for me! Thanks mister!
by the way, we just changed the glow plug in our diesel engine car.. but sometimes the engine wont start normally.
can you answer me what might be the cause?
is it on the battery? or maybe there are wires that are connected from the battery to the engine?(broken wiring i think?)
PS: I just hear clicking every time I start the engine and It is not cranking.
+JM Mayuga battery is most likely dead
I really understood . Thanks !
Thanks for the video , I have a question my tractor is a 3 cylinder diesel and after about an hour it will shut down ,what clue can you give me for that reason? Thanks!
Awesome explanation
Great presentation.
Love it, will use it for soldering tool
Good stuff, I have a toyota caldina wagon 2200cc diesel engine, so if i'm changing the glow plugs do i just buy any or there are specif ones that I should get? So ive never changed any of the plugs ever. I'm having trouble starting the engine.
wats the battery ur usin? thanks a ton in advance!!
Im a novice love the video
I knew about compression ignition in diesels but never understood glow plugs. I do now. Thanks!
Thanks for the knowledge.
GREAT!!!!!!! very helpful. thank you so much
Your welcome.
great explanation , thanks
Well explained...thank you..:)
I got shocked by a spark plug once that hurt
Idiot
Benjamin Phillips its like a tazer for a split second. it's like 30,000 to 50,000 volts
Self defense tool MacGyver style.
Yeah ive done it twice now, not a lot of fun
Shocking
Thank you so much. Great info
I figured out what glow plugs were long ago, when I was learning about gasoline engines, and what causes detonation/knock/preignition, and how to prevent that. An air/fuel mixture exploding from just being squeezed, that should never happen in a gasoline engine. An air/fuel mix igniting, not because of the spark plugs & their timing, may damage the gasoline engine.
Detonation/knock & preignition, may not only happen, because the octane rating of the gasoline, is too low, but also if it's a very hot day, and there is something wrong with the cooling system.
So I figured, since Diesel engines rely on the compression strokes, to create enough heat to ignite the diesel fuel. Glow plugs, must be things that heat up the engine, when it's too cold for that to work...and I was right. And the word GLOW, was also a big clue. It reminded me of the heating elements in a toaster oven. This is a very good video. Thank you for showing a glow plug.
I went to an automotive school, but I don't remember that much about Diesel engines, because they were briefly mentioned, and when learning about the 4 stroke cycle, we focused on gasoline engines. But what I did hear about Diesel engines freaks me out.
Diesel engines have much higher compression ratios then cars, they don't use spark plugs, they control when the diesel ignites, by squirting it into the cylinders, at an EVEN GREATER pressure. This is why the fuel lines for Diesel engines, are made of thicker metal, then gasoline engines. The diesel fuel is at such great pressure, that if there was a pinhole leak in the fuel lines, and you waved your hand over it, the diesel will cut into your hand, and diesel in your blood will kill you.
This is why Diesel engines creep me out. Especially if they were in a crash, and are still running.
I've been running my gasoline generator on kerosene like really pure k1 kerosene
And when I turn the engine switch off (the spark plug should stop making sparks) the engine stays on just because of the compression lmao I have to choke it and turn off the fuel line and It seems like no damage
@@observingrogue7652 in a crash diesels wont explode unlike gasoline and the fuel lines are far from you are sitting
@@Tsifdgoyddo
I was talking about working on a Diesel engine, after a crash, or diagnosing it while it's running. I'm worried about a hole in the fuel lines, because of that, or sabotage.
But I'm loyal to EVs now, and building Electric motorcycles now. But Diesels still creep me out, for those reasons
Can you do a video on a basic glow plug circuit? my glow plugs seems to be ok but the glow indicator in the dash still lights up constantly
good explanation thank you,
Hello,
Please help me! Why does the warning exclamation light comes on in my Focus MK2 1.6TDCI and this triggers a limp mode? will changing the Glowplugs eliminate this?