I would start with the same heat range and gap. You might be able to run a bigger gap depending on how much headroom the system has but I would not bother outside of curiosity.do i have to use same heat range and gap when switching from copper plugs to platinum or iridium?and are platinum or iridium suitable for a 34 year old car?
They're actually perfect for waste spark ignition because the dual, durable, electrodes prevent wear in both polarities while also reducing the voltage required.I have discovered, through personal experience, that exotic spark plugs don't do well in older engines. Never, ever put them in a waste spark system.
I’ve got NGK IX Iridiums in a Ford Taurus with a waste spark system. They were spec’d for the application on Rock Auto. No problems after a year.I have discovered, through personal experience, that exotic spark plugs don't do well in older engines. Never, ever put them in a waste spark system.
I tried iridium's in three different waste spark vehicles I owned. Within six months the center electrode on half the plugs disappeared in all three vehicles. Money (a lot) wasted. I've heard of other's having the same issues.They're actually perfect for waste spark ignition because the dual, durable, electrodes prevent wear in both polarities while also reducing the voltage required.
A single platinum / iridium plug can do well with COP or distributed ignition because each plug is fired with the same polarity voltage and reduce the wear associated. A dual platinum / iridium plug can prevent wear in waste spark where pairs of plugs are wired in series, with one reversed.
I have posted photos of platinum plugs that support those observations. On the Taurus V-6, the front bank plug’s center electrodes get worn down. The rear bank just gets normal wear. On the Ford Ranger with the same Vulcan engine, the left bank gets worn and the right bank doesn’t.I tried iridium's in three different waste spark vehicles I owned. Within six months the center electrode on half the plugs disappeared in all three vehicles. Money (a lot) wasted. I've heard of other's having the same issues.
As far as the coil goes, I'ts going to put out it's rated voltage no matter whats at the other end. Only the current changes. When you reduce the plug resistance, as exotic plugs claim, the resistance goes down and the current goes up and that's not a good thing.
Waste spark systems were never designed for exotic plugs. When the plug fires in the reverse direction (ground electrode to center conductor) on a non-compression (waste) cycle there is virtually no resistance for electrical path (as apposed to trying to fire under compression) and current goes sky high. I believe this is why the center electrode in waste spark systems burn away up to the insulator.
Yeah, those aren't iridium, those are fake / counterfeit. There's several videos detailing the problem and NGK has some information on how to check. Rule #1 is don't buy plugs from ebay / Amazon / 3rd party sellers. Platinum, iridium, ruthenium electrodes last an extremely long time (50k - 150k miles?) and will provide very consistent spark quality over their lifetime.I tried iridium's in three different waste spark vehicles I owned. Within six months the center electrode on half the plugs disappeared in all three vehicles. Money (a lot) wasted. I've heard of other's having the same issues.
As far as the coil goes, I'ts going to put out it's rated voltage no matter whats at the other end. Only the current changes. When you reduce the plug resistance, as exotic plugs claim, the resistance goes down and the current goes up and that's not a good thing.
Waste spark systems were never designed for exotic plugs. When the plug fires in the reverse direction (ground electrode to center conductor) on a non-compression (waste) cycle there is virtually no resistance for electrical path (as apposed to trying to fire under compression) and current goes sky high. I believe this is why the center electrode in waste spark systems burn away up to the insulator.
Oh, now your going to throw in the fake / counterfeit argument?Yeah, those aren't iridium, those are fake / counterfeit. There's several videos detailing the problem and NGK has some information on how to check. Rule #1 is don't buy plugs from ebay / Amazon / 3rd party sellers. Platinum, iridium, ruthenium electrodes last an extremely long time (50k - 150k miles?) and will provide very consistent spark quality over their lifetime.
Like I said, fake, expensive NGK plugs (and other makes) are all over the place. If you're careful you can detect the fakes but that doesn't mean you can get your money back. Real NGK platinum / iridium / ruthenium (dual electrode) plugs are perfect for waste-spark ignition systems and will outlast a standard plug by 5-10x. They reduce the voltage require to arc due to their geometry (shape) and resistance to wear (stay sharp longer).Oh, now your going to throw in the fake / counterfeit argument?
Yea, in the right application.
Please learn some basic electricity.
You have no clue about what your talking about...Like I said, fake, expensive NGK plugs (and other makes) are all over the place. If you're careful you can detect the fakes but that doesn't mean you can get your money back. Real NGK platinum / iridium / ruthenium (dual electrode) plugs are perfect for waste-spark ignition systems and will outlast a standard plug by 5-10x. They reduce the voltage require to arc due to their geometry (shape) and resistance to wear (stay sharp longer).
This voltage reduction means that you can:
- run a larger gap
- run higher boost
- get a longer / hotter arc
- less misfire in compromised situations (failing coil / wire, lean mixture, etc)
... but this does not mean you will see any improvement.
TLDR: People buy spark plugs thinking they are original / quality when they are actually fake. Fake spark plugs are not good and people get upset.You have no clue about what your talking about...
I've had engines running poorly or not starting reliably and tried "everything" except replacing the ignition coil(s) due to access issues (remote location, difficult access, several hours required). Replacing a standard plug with a single-platinum improved the starting, closing the gap got it running smooth.Why are you drifting away from the original manufacturer-specified plug? Do you want a longer change interval? Other than that not sure you'll see any real benefit for the extra money. Just curious.