Reaper
Well-known member
I've run my NKG Iridium plugs for the last 40,000 miles. Maybe I need to pull them and check them out.
Nah, don't do that, remember the SAAB?, you've got 80K to go!I've run my NKG Iridium plugs for the last 40,000 miles. Maybe I need to pull them and check them out.
Surface fire (Surface Gap) plugs are often/usually the coldest heat range available -- so, the heat range (at least too hot) isn't usually an issue. But, they take a ton of voltage to fire....Having a multi-side electrode, or surface fire plug (that's what Mazda rotaries actually use) may be one way to have the side electrode last as long as a center iridium electrode. I don't see them running any worse unless the heat range is effected negatively.
Nah, don't do that, remember the SAAB?, you've got 80K to go!I've run my NKG Iridium plugs for the last 40,000 miles. Maybe I need to pull them and check them out.
48.2 mpg? Holy crap, Bruce. Don't you use that twisty thing on the right?As point of reference, my trip to the Canadian FJR gathering was 3682 total miles and the average MPG for the entire trip was 48.219 Miles Per Gallon.
Fred, I keep telling you the stock plugs will go 30k.Yup,
Or you could just pay half as much (or less) for the standard NGK's and change them out twice as often.
Fred, I keep telling you the stock plugs will go 30k.Yup,
Or you could just pay half as much (or less) for the standard NGK's and change them out twice as often.
My feeler gauge is SAE and metric. That is the one that fit. It was slightly tighter on two of the plugs so they were not all perfect.yeah, I clicked it... :lol: :lol:
I was wonderin', Johnny, how does one measure .813mm? What you scanning those things with? An electron microscope or sumpthin?
Quite marvelous how reproduceable the results were on all 4 plugs...
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