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Maybe you can take a plug with a compression ring on it ,(a used one), and screw it in to another plug hole till it bottoms out lightly, while counting the number of turns. Then do the same thing with the same plug in the suspect hole. If it takes fewer turns, then the washer is still in there. FarmallA Steve
I did the boreoscope and couldn’t see any thing different than the 3 normal ones, I also used a dental pick duct taped to a 6 inch long 1/4” extension to try to feel any difference, but didn’t dig real hard so as not to knock in any debris, there was /is quite a lot of corrosion, the other 3 were clean. I spent a lot of time digging/ scraping , vacuuming/ blowing out the hole with the plug in place. I was glad I had the thin spark plug socket used on the inside plug on the Norge. Actually the Norge has more space around plug and the depth of hole on the VW was at least 1/3 -1/2 deeper than the Norge.I did use a little anti seize on the bottom of the new plugs, and silicon inside and outside plug boots to hopefully make them come out in 100,00 miles. Anyway it’s all back together, car runs fine so I’m happy.Wayne this plug was very corroded all the way around, the others were clean, that’s what made me wonder if perhaps unlikely is it seems,I wondered if that plug was missing the ring, I have no other explanation as to why this plug was corroded, other than the deterioration of the plug boot. The plugs went in the trash Monday morning so can’t go back and compare.Next task is replacing rear brake pads, the dealer says the pads and rotors should be replaced together. My thought is why replace the rotors, the pads are only wore down to 4mm , I can’t imagine the rotors being that bad. But I may be wrong, I’ll look at them when I get in there and decide then. The VW dealer wanted $$377.31 to replace plug, it would have ended up much more since the spark plug boot was deteriorated and had to be dug out. So 4 plugs $ 27.94 each at NAPA, and new sparkplug boot $8.00 also NAPA saved over $250 = more beer money. Except my time and for me shop time is like meditating. The quoted cost for brake pad and rotor change is $598.23. I’m going to see how much I can save here by doing it myself and only replacing discs. My rational here is ( feel free to correct me) but I’ve never had to change rotors on any bike I’ve owned and the car certainly doesn’t get the braking we’ve done on the bikes.So thanks for all the suggestions/ input I sincerely appreciate having the forum as a sounding board. Lots of good folks here in the goose family.