2000 Civic spark plug

Discussion in 'Civic' started by Subhabrata Bhattacharyya, Apr 10, 2005.

  1. Hi group,
    I replaced the spark plug of my 2000 civic with DENSO: KJ16CR-L11 spark plugs. I forgot to adjust the spark plug gap and fitted the spark plugs as I got it. The car is running smoothly and no problem both in high rev and low, or in high speed , low speed or in acceleration is noted. Apparently, they are in the right gap , i.e. 0.04". Do I need to take the spark plugs apart again to find the actual gaps? I am worried that it might develop some problem later on.

    Thanks for the help,
    SB
     
    Subhabrata Bhattacharyya, Apr 10, 2005
    #1
  2. Subhabrata Bhattacharyya

    SadaYama Guest

    Even though they come adjusted, for what ever is the specification, it
    is a good idea to check the gap, before you screw them in -- always. In
    any case, since it is bothering you, why don't you pull them apart and
    check them, and put'em back.
     
    SadaYama, Apr 10, 2005
    #2
  3. It's always a good idea to check them. They're only set to the
    approximate gap size.

    You can fry your ignition system if the gap is much too large (over
    voltage at high manifold pressure). It might fire during the
    compression stroke if it's much too small (coil charging). I don't know
    what happens, if anything, if it's just a little off.
     
    Kevin McMurtrie, Apr 10, 2005
    #3
  4. Subhabrata Bhattacharyya

    John Guest

    Well, if the ignition wire has too much resistance and the spark is at
    correct gap then it's the same as having normal resistance and having the
    gap a little too big. So I don't think a tiny difference will make much
    difference because it depends on other things in the ignition system as
    well, particularly how much voltage it's sending, resistance in wires, etc.
     
    John, Apr 11, 2005
    #4
  5. Subhabrata Bhattacharyya

    TeGGer® Guest



    Leave them alone. They're already pregapped to 1.1mm (.040"), which is what
    the "L11" means.

    I can't find what Denso's codes mean, but if they're platinum or iridium
    coated, gapping the is a bad idea. The plating is thin and easily damaged
    by forcing a gapping tool between the elctrodes.

    Spark plugs are made to tolerances down to a thousandth of an inch. Why
    does everybody figure the makers suddenly got sloppy with one single
    dimension? The only way the gap is going to be off by any meaningful amount
    is if the plug gets dropped with the protective cap removed.
     
    TeGGer®, Apr 11, 2005
    #5
  6. Subhabrata Bhattacharyya

    jim beam Guest

    that's correct. never wire brush plugs either as it leaves traces of
    metal on the insulator & weakens the spark.
     
    jim beam, Apr 11, 2005
    #6
  7. Thanks a lot TeGGer and everybody.
    That helped a lot,
    SB
     
    Subhabrata Bhattacharyya, Apr 11, 2005
    #7
  8. Subhabrata Bhattacharyya

    y_p_w Guest

    While using a gapping tool on a platinum plug isn't recommended, I
    find that the platinum points on a Denso plug are rather thick and
    durable.
    The manufacturer's typically recommend that the gap be checked
    before installation except for platinum/iridium plugs. They
    warn against it, but have regapping instructions which state
    that a round gapping tool should not be used.

    <http://densoiridium.com/installationguide.php>

    BTW - Denso now makes a single-tip Iridium plug called "Iridium
    Power". It's their standard U-groove ground electrode with an
    iridium center electrode. They still have their "long-life"
    iridium plugs.
     
    y_p_w, Apr 11, 2005
    #8
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