I just replaced the glow plugs in my truck. As the weather got colder, it was taking too much cranking to start. I had three swelled glow plug tips. I did not have the special tool. I needed my truck to get to work the next day, so I had to get it done. My procedure was this:
1. Unscrewed glow plug till it would just spin free but not pull out.
2. With six point socket on the glow plug, I started to 'bend' it up and down, more each time until the glow plug inner part snapped off. I then removed the fuel injector, and used a magnetic probe to carefully fish out the broken tip. I then used a shop vac with a narrow nozzle to vacuum out the glow plug hole first, and then the injector hole.
3. The new glow plug would not screw in easily by hand (they should) so I had to run a tap into the glow plug hole (but not to far...I didn't want to damage where the glow plug base seats).
4. I then used a shop vac with a narrow nozzle to vacuum out the glow plug hole first, and then the injector hole.
5. Installed the new glow plug (AC 60) but the terminals need to be carefully ground narrower for CUCV connectors.
All of the swelled up plugs were Wellmans. I have never come across a swelled AC 60 glow plug.
The truck starts up super-fast now.
This procedure worked for me, but it may be better to get the correct glow plug pulling tool. Bending the old glow plugs up and down to snap off a swelled end may not be best for the threads in the head. H.