Terminal miss-fire issue....again
An unaltered engine will run within the optimum operating range straight from the manufacturer, but if you make modifications such as a turbo, supercharger, increase compression, timing changes, use of alternate fuels, or sustained use of nitrous oxide, these can alter the plug tip temperature and may necessitate a colder plug. A rule of thumb is, one heat range colder per modification or one heat range colder for every 75–100hp you increase. In identical spark plug types, the difference from one full heat range to the next is the ability to remove 70°C to 100°C from the combustion chamber.
An unaltered engine will run within the optimum operating range straight from the manufacturer, but if you make modifications such as a turbo, supercharger, increase compression, timing changes, use of alternate fuels, or sustained use of nitrous oxide, these can alter the plug tip temperature and may necessitate a colder plug. A rule of thumb is, one heat range colder per modification or one heat range colder for every 75–100hp you increase. In identical spark plug types, the difference from one full heat range to the next is the ability to remove 70°C to 100°C from the combustion chamber.
Thanks, I think the word here is would not. It was actually the shop foreman hovering over the car to make sure that anything done would be billed. My SA was in CYA mode (he quit while my car was there) and no one was thinking like a mechanic just blaming the headers for what the STAR was showing. Feels better resolving it yourself anyway. Got two weeks of a free loaner as well.
However, if something goes awry such as a sensor failure, batch of bad or additive laden fuel, glazing and other deposits can occur and misfires will result.
Congrats on figuring it out!
.

For Bosch, a 7 heat rang plug is colder than an 8.
I am led to believe a 7 HR Bosch and 7 HR NGK are more or less comparable as to heat range, all other design features being equal.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
Most importantly, if its a warranty issue, they aren't going to get paid for hours and hours of time to chase problems on a modified car.
Jim
If you are staying on the street with short burst of full load you MAY want to go with one heat range cooler plug.
If you will track the car or spend extended periods of time at full throttle (absolutely nuts on the street!) you DEFINITELY should go to a cooler plug.
Have fun and be safe!
h.
Regarding the original issue, after the plugs were replaced, the codes came back but the car ran much better. The front O2 sensor was replaced even though no specific O2 codes were being thrown and the problem went away completely. Should have started with Mthis' advice
How are those SLS plugs running? They are gapped a little differently than stock, not sure if it's a meaningful difference (.039 vs .044) Do you remember by chance how much they were each roughly?
Last edited by GHAZAN; Aug 2, 2011 at 08:22 PM.
However they told me to have them regapped that's why I was asking on the forum otherwise I'll give them a call tomorrow.
what spark plugs are know to be the better performer out of the bunch?
I know life span should be a little shorter, but which ones should I go for
I also have Kleemann LTs and a tune and I beat on the car regularly
Edit, after some reading, I want to go with Brisk LGS, should I go for heat range 12? and what's the best place to get them from?
-AJ
Last edited by ASHRAF C63; Jul 28, 2015 at 06:59 PM.




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