Bosh Platinums
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Grr;199281 wrote:
I would like to take this moment, for all youz that dont know, to say:
NEVER UNDER ANY CIRCUMSTANCES USE PLATINUM PLUGS
seriously, that is all, Use standard NGKs or go away
GaryWell, I know they are a "NoNo" In turbo cars, But not everyone knows what you know about them apparently! and ngk's are sitting on my desk right now :icon_shaking:
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i use denso iridums and they're great for $12 a piece ha
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dynotune;199308 wrote:
the scenario you have shown in the picture has nothing to do with the quality of the spark plug- it looks like it was too hot (like you got the wrong ones!) I am not a fan of the bosch plugs either, but this is an application problem, not a part failureI agree with Andy on this one. I don't care what brand they are, I have seen EVERY major brand of spark plug fail in one way or another. (Some NGK's too). I'll lay money that the Platinum on the electrode had absolutely NOTHING to do with the failure of the plug. As to what caused it, that's up for debate but, dont blame "platinum" or "Bosh" for the problem.
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weshole;199335 wrote:
I agree with Andy on this one. I don't care what brand they are, I have seen EVERY major brand of spark plug fail in one way or another. (Some NGK's too). I'll lay money that the Platinum on the electrode had absolutely NOTHING to do with the failure of the plug. As to what caused it, that's up for debate but, dont blame "platinum" or "Bosh" for the problem.I really dont think it is a heat issue, these also cross reference to the engine in the books, i have seen what lean conditions do to plugs and the remaining plugs have no sign of metal blowing away and are showing the nice tan or brownish coloring. also i have heard from other people about this problem with platinums in general before, but usually in turbo cars. i will agree that it may not necisarily be the fact that it is a platinum, but personally i beleive that the electrode/porcelain was defective. i have seen the bridges fall off of plugs before but for the whole electrode to fall out clear up to the metal casing isnide to me is odd.
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kinda dissapointing lol i have so much work and money in this car, i dont want to have to remove the head, but ...... what can ya do???
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weshole;199340 wrote:
Im not sure on gains. But I do recall someone having spark plug issues when boosting the shit out of their cars. I thought it was either Kevin or Burgess. It probably has nothing to do with wether they were platinum, but maybe they can chime in here.I had plug blow out, but that was my mistake. Stock plug gap while running 15+psi
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i wasnt saying that it being a platinum plug was the reason it failed, just the fact that platinums fail in general. Also, you guys that bought expensive ass iridium plugs, those suck too, ESPECIALLY in a boosted application, that is as big of a no-no as platinums. Look at what guys making 1500+hp are using, most are standard type plugs for a reason.
Gary -
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i tried the platinum 4's on my fuel miser.. just like any other plug change (when your plugs have been used for ten years) the car ran a little more smoothly. Nothing special. They foul more visibly, having way more shiny surface area between the spark and air/fuel mixture. I'm switching to NGK's on the next plug change, probably pretty soon. They're just better. And cheaper. NGK's you get what you pay for (less than 2 bucks) and more. better than not getting what you paid for in other plugs. or having one blow apart. hope there's no major damage.
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