MFaulks wrote:si21 wrote:MFaulks wrote:pgoldsmith wrote:I'm currently using Champion S6YC plugs set at 0.8mm gap.
Havent changed these for 12 months or so, but to be honest I only did about a 1000 miles last year if that.
I'm not a big Champion fan, NGK through and through, but hey ho. I would run them closed up a little at 0.6mm, and see how you get on at that. It will give your rotor arm and dizzy cap a slightly easier time as well.
Martin[/quote
So you recommend closing the gap slightly, does this not reduce the flame front, does this not reduce power due to a less efficient combustion chamber burn?
I am not saying your wrong Martin, I am just keen to learn the reasons behind it, or is this something you have found to be ok through real life experience/trial and error?
Cheers
Si21
Hi Simon,
Later.. results on the rollers, and general running. If you are on the OE single coil pack you are on a limited energy budget, better to have a strong short spark than a weak long one... it's all about heat intensity, not that the spark jumps from one side of the chamber to the other. In fact, the orientation of the plug earth strap will have more effect on performance within this gap range than the gap... if you are really serious about it you will index your plugs as well...
Yes if you close it up too much it will expose less fuel air to be ionised, and hence weaken the initial kernel, but you have to close it up a lot. The over-riding thing in this case is the limited amount of energy from the OE coil pack... hence my comment, recommendation and how I run them, works good for me chap
If you have modern coils and drivers, and consequently a good margin of excess energy, then sure widen them back up, but I'll put a full English on it, you won't pick up much worth talking about
Cheers,
Martin
Cheers Martin
Simon