The pickup has ~ 78k miles on it with factory plugs (nothing wrong with that). I plan on changing them along with the wires that I posted about earlier. I'm looking at the Denso iridium p/n IT16 stock # 5325. This is the correct plug per Denso's online application guide. The factory service manual calls for 0.061-0.068" gap. The Denso plugs come with 0.044" gap. Should I widen the gap on the iridium plugs to 0.061" so that they match the specs in the manual?
So, I looked at the Denso FAQ. If I'm interpreting it correctly, they say leave plug as is assuming that accidental adjustments haven't occurred. Of course, you can adjust but there doesn't seem to be a good reason to do so. What say ye? I'm thinking it's best to leave them as provided.
Also, any need for anti-seize on these plugs? Denso says to cut the torque by 50% if anti-seize is used. The FSM says 13 ft-lb (156 in-lb) which I assumeis dry since the manual doesn't say to lubricate the spark plugs with anti-seize. That would drop it down to 6.5 ft-lb (78 in-lb).
So, I looked at the Denso FAQ. If I'm interpreting it correctly, they say leave plug as is assuming that accidental adjustments haven't occurred. Of course, you can adjust but there doesn't seem to be a good reason to do so. What say ye? I'm thinking it's best to leave them as provided.
Also, any need for anti-seize on these plugs? Denso says to cut the torque by 50% if anti-seize is used. The FSM says 13 ft-lb (156 in-lb) which I assumeis dry since the manual doesn't say to lubricate the spark plugs with anti-seize. That would drop it down to 6.5 ft-lb (78 in-lb).