|
Thanks, Thomas....Makes sense. I just
looked up the thin-wall plug socket that Racing Beat is so proud
of....$65.00 Must be gold and platinum with an Uranium core !!! I
think I'll just buy the NGK BR9EQ and use a standard socket to install
them. Paul, ain't spending no stinking 65 dollars for a wrench,
Conner
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2004 8:42
PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Oil leak at
filter solved (unshrouded plug ?)
If I remember right (..my Suzuki Samurai used NGK's),
the R stands for some kind of kind of radio interference protection (according
to the catalog of the autoshop...). They didn't have the ones I wanted, but
the same number without the R. Made no difference on the radio in the
Samurai....
Thomas J.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2004 9:29
PM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Oil leak at
filter solved (unshrouded plug ?)
Hi, Al....I have been using NGK BR9EQ
plugs. Then I tried some NGK B9EGV plugs, and I could not screw them
all the way into my engine with my Craftsman deep socket, because the length
of the plug left sticking out of the engine was still recessed partway into
the spark plug hole, and the socket kept slipping off the hex portion of the
plug, which would not allow me to tighten the plugs. Both plugs are
identical in length below the sealing washer....it's just that the height
sticking out of the engine is shorter on the B9EGV plugs than it is on the
BR9EQ plugs. I went to AutoZone, and they substituted an Autolite
2526 plug for the BR9EQ, and it measures the same as the BR9EQ plug, and I
could install it with a standard deep socket. Unfortunately, I
don't know what the R or the EQ stands for....just know they are much easier
to install. Perhaps someone can shed a little more light on this
subject. Thanks. Paul Conner
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Monday, November 29, 2004 10:26
AM
Subject: [FlyRotary] Re: Oil leak at
filter solved (unshrouded plug ?)
What are the make and number of the unshrouded
plugs??
TIA,
Bernie
I’m using NGK B9EGV for both leading and trailing;
recommended to me by Paul Yaw a few years ago.
Ed; just guessing, but I think that Paul Yaw link
you referenced is from about 1999.
There
were a couple of times during the dyno runs that the engine got very
flooded, but then started easily when we got the conditions
corrected.
Al
|