comnoz said:If you want to take advantage of the fine wire electrode [that does help a bit] without paying for the Irridium electrode then you can buy the NGK V plug.
http://www.ebay.com/itm/10-NGK-6824-B8E ... dc&vxp=mtr
AND
where do i find Unobtainium plugs?
JimC said:AND
where do i find Unobtainium plugs?
In the Nether regions.
tomspro said:it is great to have choices. not so much 'back in the day'.
always looking for easy upgrades, but after reading Jim's reply am torn between:
he likes to mess with us (dual coil envy) :twisted:
AND
where do i find Unobtainium plugs?
comnoz said:tomspro said:it is great to have choices. not so much 'back in the day'.
always looking for easy upgrades, but after reading Jim's reply am torn between:
he likes to mess with us (dual coil envy) :twisted:
AND
where do i find Unobtainium plugs?
Actually I have been running a single two post coil on my bike for several years.
I am planning on installing dual CNP coils this winter with plasma ignition. Lower voltage but higher frequency than what I have been using. Jim
tomspro said:comnoz said:tomspro said:it is great to have choices. not so much 'back in the day'.
always looking for easy upgrades, but after reading Jim's reply am torn between:
he likes to mess with us (dual coil envy) :twisted:
AND
where do i find Unobtainium plugs?
Actually I have been running a single two post coil on my bike for several years.
I am planning on installing dual CNP coils this winter with plasma ignition. Lower voltage but higher frequency than what I have been using. Jim
PLASMA! now I KNOW you are messin' with us! :mrgreen:
xbacksideslider said:Subject to Jim's point about single vs dual coils - sharp points - that's the idea behind platinum or iridium center electrodes. Platinum melts at a far lower temperature than iridium. Only a seriously mistuned Norton could make enough heat to melt a platinum center electrode. Turbo or supercharged engines, however, is where the higher heat tolerance of an iridium plug can pay for itself. Also, many of the newer platinum on both sides plugs are not designed for high performance, rather, they are designed for 200,000 mile automobile (anti-smog regs) longevity by virtue of platinum's greater resistance to the spark erosion that a steel electrode suffers from.
xbacksideslider said:Don't know if it is true or not but I recall it said that the original fine wire platinum Champion plugs that were popular with the old magneto points ignitions on the Yamaha two stroke twins operated as a "fuse" in that - it was claimed - the platinum would melt, increasing the plug's spark gap, and thus degrade the spark, thereby reducing heat, just before the moment that the engine would melt a piston or seize.