NGK/Denso or Champion. NGK for cars and Champion for small engines have never steered me wrong
I agree with this. I changed my 5.7 HEMI’s copper plugs out for Autolite Iridium XP’s and was told all sorts of wild stories, like the “coils aren’t strong enough and you’ll get misfires” or “you’ll cause detonation even if you use the same heat range!” Never had a problem with them, engine ran great.The Autolite XP Iridiums are the best bang for the buck followed by Denso TT's. Those would be my choice.
I don't and never have bought into the "OEM only" mind set. The OEM's such as AC DELCO, motorcraft etc don't make parts so you're buying a rebranded product and paying more. I've used all sorts of Autolites, Champions, NGK, Denso etc and never any issues. The only plug I ever had issues with were Bosch and I will not use them anymore - and I gave them multiple tries over the years.
I have done countless tuneup professionally and tunups over 5 decades,The car has 34,000 miles on it. Haven't touched anything yet, because the intake has to come off to get at the passenger side plugs. I'm assuming it has Motorcraft SP520s in it, but Ford does surprise me on occasion.
I do want to see what they look like, and I'm of the mindset that if I'm going to pull them, I might as well replace them with the best possible plug, and get anti-seize on them. Car runs fine.....this is just something I always do when I buy pre-owned.
The American made NGK V power have been garbage. Usually a 1/2 step hotter than factory.Motorcraft or Autolite for Fords only. My friend put some NGK in his Ford and it fouled them out and ran terribly almost immediately, he put Motorcraft back in and problem went away. Some vehicles don’t like some plugs. Yes it was an old Ford but that’s happened to me plenty of times with other vehicles too.
Agree 100%.I always stick with the brand which was originally installed on the engine from the factory. I have never seen an engine actually run better by using a non OEM brand of spark plug.
The car has 34,000 miles on it. Haven't touched anything yet, because the intake has to come off to get at the passenger side plugs. I'm assuming it has Motorcraft SP520s in it, but Ford does surprise me on occasion.
I do want to see what they look like, and I'm of the mindset that if I'm going to pull them, I might as well replace them with the best possible plug, and get anti-seize on them. Car runs fine.....this is just something I always do when I buy pre-owned.
Lol, that is so funny. I currently have Autolite XP's in a 3.6L Jeep Grand Cherokee and a 2016 Ram Hemi 5.7. Just fine on both.I agree with this. I changed my 5.7 HEMI’s copper plugs out for Autolite Iridium XP’s and was told all sorts of wild stories, like the “coils aren’t strong enough and you’ll get misfires” or “you’ll cause detonation even if you use the same heat range!” Never had a problem with them, engine ran great.
Ruthenium ...... they are awesome.Hey guys,
I always like to get your input on things like this, as point-of-view and experience can really help with decision making, since there are so many choices.
I normally stick to OEM parts when doing maintenance, but I also realize there can be quality differences if one is willing to step outside the OEM box.
Please share which spark plug you would recommend, and why. I'm not set on Motorcraft when it comes to spark plugs.
2017 Mustang 3.7.
Thanks!
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