Toyota ignition systems do not wear plugs in that manner.Take a look at this plug from my Durango with 106k miles on the plug. It needed to be changed.
Who has time for that?!? Waiter.....run the plugs in and ship it!Cool engine of course.
Toyota ignition systems do not wear plugs in that manner.Take a look at this plug from my Durango with 106k miles on the plug. It needed to be changed.
Who has time for that?!? Waiter.....run the plugs in and ship it!Cool engine of course.
I don't have tons of experience but I've changed many factory-installed Iridium plugs in Hondas, Nissan, and even Ford that were 100k+ miles and they never looked that bad. If I had removed them for "inspection" only, I'd have left them in longer but they were all slightly past the service interval and I had the replacements so they were getting changed no matter what. The 6 plugs in a Nissan were still within factory-spec on the gap at 115k miles.Take a look at this plug from my Durango with 106k miles on the plug. It needed to be changed.
Yes it is time and install the same as you took out....Runs great, 30 mpg, I'm happy but I have no clue of recommended interval. I s'pose I could google, or even take one out but if I can get a thread going. Should I just get whatever is in there or is there a better plug/ How much at Auto zone, Toyota dlr, etc? TIA
It is not really a debate as it is not needed anymore… Just about every spark plug manufacturer will recommend against putting any lubrication on spark plugs. NGK, AC Delco, Champion, Bosch, Denso, and more all say to avoid it.I changed the plugs in my camry at 100k miles with counterfeit Densos from Amazon. Changed them again at 120k miles with Densos from AZ. A magnetic spark plug socked makes it a very easy job.
Whether to put never seize on the threads is a whole debate in itself.
Its that simple....Run what ever came out.
Mine looked identical to yours. The electrode wear was about the same at 87k miles when I pulled them out.Take a look at this plug from my Durango with 106k miles on the plug. It needed to be changed.
Supposedly it’s the Champion plugs in Chrysler engines that do this and NGKs apparently don’t wear out the electrode like that. But I’m not sure how accurate these reports are.Toyota ignition systems do not wear plugs in that manner.
when it throws a code?At what point do you freshen up the O2 ?
When you have to hold your breath at stoplights because the 02 sensor keeps telling the computer to pour more fuel into the engineAt what point do you freshen up the O2 ?
I thought that was an exhaust mode that comes free in rust belt states?When you have to hold your breath at stoplights because the 02 sensor keeps telling the computer to pour more fuel into the engine
Oh maybe, i don't live in a state with clouds or rain or other weird stuff so it's only happened to me because of a lazy sensor.I thought that was an exhaust mode that comes free in rust belt states?
NGK might want to check with Honda on that. Best thing people can do when it comes to spark plugs and anti-seize is not tell anyone what they used or didn't use.NGK spark plugs are installed at the factory dry, without lubrication or anti-seize.