My exact car, so thanks for the part numbers and easy explanation. At 80k miles my car uses oil and when I replaced the pcv today it clunked around vs the nice rattle of a new one. The only thing I would suggest is that people use a torque wrench to tighten the plugs. 15lbs is way different than people think it is.
I'm glad the install turned out well! Oh yea I agree, can easily over tighten if not used to installing spark plugs. I appreciate you taking the time to comment and sharing your install!
@@bentleypetersen2663 it only helped it burn faster, which is good for me since it's under warranty. I would suggest looking up the class action filed earlier this year and contacting the attorneys if you aren't under warranty.
thanks for a well explained tutorial. I watched your video and was able to successfully change out the plugs on my 2013 Sonata. And I'm a girl ! 😉 now on for the pcv valve !
I have a 2017 Hyundai sonata, 49k miles,where I have replaced the valve cover gasket, spark plugs and ignitions coils but I’m still getting cylinder misfires. Any clue what I can try next?
Definitely seems to be a common occurrence with these vehicles, a rogue cylinder misfire. I'd try to swap coils between cylinders to see if the code switches cylinder then narrow down from there again
This is like 6 months old now but I saw another video where oil was leaking past a seal and affecting the intake cam shaft sensor... on top inside the timing chain cover.
You wouldn't be able to tell the difference between the two and neither would most torque wrenches be that precise unless you have a 500 snap-on torque wrench...then in that case go for it!
My exact car, so thanks for the part numbers and easy explanation. At 80k miles my car uses oil and when I replaced the pcv today it clunked around vs the nice rattle of a new one. The only thing I would suggest is that people use a torque wrench to tighten the plugs. 15lbs is way different than people think it is.
I'm glad the install turned out well! Oh yea I agree, can easily over tighten if not used to installing spark plugs. I appreciate you taking the time to comment and sharing your install!
Are you saying replacing the pcv helped with your car burning oil? Mine consumes oil like it's oxygen I have to add about 3qts every 1500 miles
@@bentleypetersen2663 it only helped it burn faster, which is good for me since it's under warranty. I would suggest looking up the class action filed earlier this year and contacting the attorneys if you aren't under warranty.
thanks for a well explained tutorial. I watched your video and was able to successfully change out the plugs on my 2013 Sonata. And I'm a girl ! 😉 now on for the pcv valve !
Congratulations on the successful spark plug change! I appreciate the time you took to comment and share feedback
Looks simple enough... Thank you
Not a difficult project at all, good luck with your install!
Straight to the point
Very nice job!!
Appreciate the feedback on the video!
15 ft/lb for spart plug and 8 ft/lb for pcv.
Can you provide links for the PVC valve and plugs you purchased? Thank you
Plugs are NGK 96358
Good video thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Can you do a video on how to replace the fuel filter on a hyundai sonata?
I'll add it to the video list log I have!
I have a 2017 Hyundai sonata, 49k miles,where I have replaced the valve cover gasket, spark plugs and ignitions coils but I’m still getting cylinder misfires. Any clue what I can try next?
Definitely seems to be a common occurrence with these vehicles, a rogue cylinder misfire. I'd try to swap coils between cylinders to see if the code switches cylinder then narrow down from there again
This is like 6 months old now but I saw another video where oil was leaking past a seal and affecting the intake cam shaft sensor... on top inside the timing chain cover.
Thank you!!!!
No problem! Glad the video was useful 👍🏾
Dealer told me 10.8 to 18 foot pounds for spark plugs.. I dunno about doing 21
You wouldn't be able to tell the difference between the two and neither would most torque wrenches be that precise unless you have a 500 snap-on torque wrench...then in that case go for it!