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| Steeda Autosports A Ford performance legacy spanning nearly two decades.
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#1 |
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Senior TEAM Member
Join Date: Oct 2005
Location: south Jersey
Posts: 1,755
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I noticed that the spark plugs either come in stock heat or Colder Heat Range Spark Plugs? whats the difference? is there any advantage between using stock form or colder? thanks!!
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#2 |
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TEAM Member
Join Date: Jun 2004
Posts: 949
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So, the secondary role of spark plugs is to conduct heat from the cylinder into the head (and thus coolant). The "heat" of a spark plug refers to how much heat it conducts away from the cylinder. The colder the spark plug, the more heat it conducts. For stock and slightly modified you most likely want to stay with the stock "heat". For FI and wild cars you'd want to go colder to keep the cylinder temps in check.
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'02 ZX3, 264whp/251tq @ 12psi, GT28RS custom kit, FC 65mm TB, JE 9:1 pistons, Eagle Rods, FR Head, Crower springs, Comp turbo cams, Esslinger gears, ARP studs/bolts, Focus-Power billet main caps, '00 ported intake mani, Quaife LSD, 4.06 gear, Spec stg3 clutch, Fidanza flywheel, SCT Pro Racer + Raptor tuning, Zeitronix Wideband, J&S Safeguard, FC STS. |
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#3 | |
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Rookie
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 10
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Quote:
Conversely, I run one heat range hotter than standard in my '78 Scout's V8 because it's an old and naturally low-revving truck engine, and the hotter plugs stay cleaner --- they tend to burn off oil deposits, etc. |
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