This is maddening. After rebuilding the top end of my 550, I discovered crossed threads on spark plug hole #4. Fine. I pulled the head again, got the helicoil kit, drilled it out, tapped and installed the helicoil. While the head was still off, I screwed the plug into the hole to make sure it worked and was sitting flush in the combustion chamber.
I removed the plug and finished reassembling the motor. Got everything back together, adjusted valves, etc. Last step was to put the plugs back in.
When I started with #4, though the plug turned easily, it appeared to be going in crooked. Sure enough, when I put my spark plug wrench on it, the wrench hit up against the head. I was able to screw in the plug with the wrench a bit cockeyed, but then the plug stopped very suddenly.
I pulled the plug out again and shone a light into the hole. The threads appear to be crooked. That is, the beginning of the coil appears to start one thread LOWER than the top thread 180 degrees away. Maybe that's some kind of optical illusion, but what's certain is that the plug is going in crooked, and then it meets a hard stop when the shank of the plug hits up against the raised edge of the head, with the plug only about 2/3 of the way screwed in.
How is this possible? I checked this when the head was still off? How could the threads become cockeyed? And if they're cockeyed, wouldn't the plug just not screw in at all?
And what am I to do about this? I really don't want to pull the head again. I thought about trying to pick out the coil and insert another one, but will that do any good? If the coil is somehow crooked, isn't the problem the tap itself?
Help.