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What causes spark knock and how do you get rid of it

Drawing on left shows completion of normal combustion. Cutaway on
right shows a detonating cylinder, where the last portion of the
air/fuel mixture self-ignites and collides with the normal combustion front.
Spark knock (detonation) is an erratic form of combustion that occurs
when multiple flame fronts occur simultaneously inside a combustion
chamber. Detonation occurs because fuel is subjected to either too
much pressure, too much heat or both. It usually happens during
acceleration when the engine is heavily loaded and cylinder pressures
are at their peak.
Instead of a single flame front growing outward smoothly like an
expanding balloon from the point of ignition, multiple flame fronts
are generated spontaneously throughout the combustion chamber as the
fuel automatically ignites from heat and pressure. The multiple flame
fronts collide, creating shock waves that produce a sharp metallic
pinging or knocking noise.
Mild detonation can occur in almost any engine and will not cause
damage. Prolonged heavy detonation can crack pistons and rings, blow
out head gaskets, damage spark plugs and valves, and flatten rod bearings.
Any of the following can cause detonation:
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Too Much Compression: An
accumulation of carbon deposits in the combustion chambers, on piston
tops and valves can increase compression to the point where it
exceeds fuel octane rating. If a top cleaner fuel additive fails to
remove deposits, a new alternative is to blast the deposits loose by
blowing crushed walnut shells through the spark plug hole. Otherwise,
the head will have to be removed so the deposits can be scraped off.
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Overadvanced Ignition Timing:
Too much spark advance causes cylinder pressure to rise too rapidly.
If resetting the timing to stock specifications does not help,
retarding timing a couple of degrees may be necessary to eliminate knock.
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Engine Overheating: A hot
engine is more likely to suffer spark knock than one which runs at
normal temperature. Overheating can be caused by low coolant, a
defective fan clutch, too hot a thermostat, a bad water pump, etc. A
buildup of lime and rust deposits in the head and block can also
reduce heat transfer
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Overheated Air: The
thermostatically controlled air cleaner provides the carburetor with
hot air to aid fuel vaporization during engine warm-up. If the air
control door sticks shut so that the carburetor continues to receive
heated air after the engine is warm, detonation may occur, especially
during hot weather. Check the operation of the air flow control door
in the air cleaner to see that it opens as the engine warms up. No
movement may mean a loose vacuum hose or a defective vacuum motor or thermostat.
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Lean Fuel Mixture: Rich fuel
mixtures resist detonation while lean ones do not. Air leaks in
vacuum lines, intake manifold gaskets, carburetor gaskets or fuel
injection intake plumbing downstream of the throttle can all admit
extra air into the engine and lean out the fuel mixture. Lean
mixtures can also be caused by dirty fuel injectors, carburetor jets
clogged with fuel deposits or dirt, a restricted fuel filter, or a
weak fuel pump.
The air/fuel ratio can also be affected by changes in altitude. A
carburetor calibrated for high altitude driving will run too lean if
driven at a lower elevation. Altitude changes are generally
compensated for on computer cars by the barometric pressure sensor.
A lean fuel condition can be diagnosed by watching for lean misfire
on an ignition scope, or by using a four-gas infrared analyzer and
watching exhaust oxygen levels. A reading over about 3% to 4% oxygen
would indicate a lean fuel condition.
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Spark Plug Too Hot: The
wrong heat range plug can cause detonation as well as pre-ignition.
Copper core plugs are less likely to cause detonation than standard
spark plugs.
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Loss of Exhaust Gas Recirculation (EGR):
EGR keeps combustion temperatures down, reducing the tendency to
detonate. If the EGR valve is inoperative or someone has disconnected
or plugged its vacuum hose, higher combustion temperatures can cause pinging.
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Low Octane Fuel: Burning
cheap gas may be one way to save pennies, but switching to a higher
grade of fuel may be necessary to eliminate a persistent knock problem.
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Defective Knock Sensor: The
knock sensor responds to frequency vibrations produced by detonation
(typically 6 - 8 kHz), and signals the computer to momentarily retard
ignition timing until detonation stops. A knock sensor can usually be
tested by rapping a wrench on the manifold near the sensor (never hit
the sensor itself). If there is no timing retard, the sensor may be defective.
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