I think that should be fine. Those gap gauges are only so accurate anyhow.
I think that should be fine. Those gap gauges are only so accurate anyhow.
[quote author=vtluu link=topic=12691.msg169983#msg169983 date=1158340218]<br />No law can save idiot CA drivers from themselves though. The best you can do is try to make sure they don't take you out in the process of Darwinning themselves.<br />[/quote]
So DSM plugs work? Same idea with the heat ranges and gaps as DSMs?Originally Posted by EvolvedDSM
Scott
EDIT: FWIW you're not supposed to gap either iridium or platinum plugs because it can damage the electrode. And in the case of platinum it easily breaks the larger insulator.
05 Evolution RS <br />04 Forester XT <br />91 Eclipse GSX<br />2 inch cock
hey guys i got a good one for you. a few months ago i decided to check my plugs. well this is the first time they have ever been removed from the car and sure enough one of the plugs was jacked it looked like when mitsu put the car together that they dropped one of my plugs because the top part of the plug was almost tuching the diode. i mean you couldnt get a gap tool in there if you tried. so i replaced them and man the car ran so much better. well the stock plug is NGK BPR7EIX and i went with NGK BPR8EIX because i needed one step colder because the oem plugs were white on top from over heating. i strongly suggest that you go with oem or NGK BPR7EIX (same plug) and stay away from denso. i noticed that denso plugs are shorter than the ngk so that means that they dont get in the center of the cylinder as well. allso you only need to go one step colder if you have lots of mods and are running more boost. oh yeah when gapping a iradium plug be careful they will break easily. ngk's website shows you how to do it the right way
The OEM plugs are the NGK IGR7A-G "Laser Iridium". The ones I got are the BPR7EIX "Iridium IX" which is their top-of-the-line iridium plug. Paid $6.22 ($7.55 shipped) a plug for the set of 4 from the following link: http://www.rockauto.com/catalog/cata...5&a=FR100-4055
For the most part, yes. The EVO heat range is one step colder to start with vs. a DSM.Originally Posted by Eclipse
I think its time for a change, so how did these plugs work for you?Originally Posted by vtluu
FWIW, I only ran NGK BPR7ES on all my DSMs. $8 for a set of plugs can't be beat. I had no blow out or spark issues at 25psi of boost running 400whp.Originally Posted by RonV
So I would say depending on car, the Iridiums are unecessary. Earlyapex runs copper plugs in his MR and continues to rape everyone on track. YMMV.
<br />Originally Posted by "bdking57"
Thanks for the info man, as far as gapping on the plug goes in the range of .028-.032 be okay?Originally Posted by methods4
I changed mine out about 6 months ago... the ones I had in there were pretty nasty. With the evo you can almost feel when they need to be replaced.. you kinda of start feeling alot of hesitating and noticable blurps at part throttle. Also I think i read somewhere that the plug wires should be replaced every 60K miles.. I just ordered ralliart spark plug wires and I may try my luck with cooper plugs. If using the NGK iridiums in one step colder right now.. going with the colder plug give less chance of detonating, but at the cost of crappier idle
Here is a good link to check the condition of ur spark plugs and give an idea of whats going on in ur engine;
http://www.machv.com/diagsparplug.html