- Mon Jan 18, 2016 1:34 pm
#54336
There’s a fair bit of mis-information in this thread – no need for it, most of this stuff is on the NGK web-site – no need either for ‘super science’ to overwhelm us!
A spark plug’s ability to transfer heat determines its heat range. The heat range of spark plugs is classified either as ‘hot’ or ‘cold’ (or, as some prefer, as ‘soft’ or ‘hard’: HOT = SOFT; COLD = HARD.)
With N.K.G plugs the identification is that a higher number indicates a harder (or colder) plug. (This sequence is reversed with Champion plugs, so that a lower number indicates a harder grade of plug.)
A HOT (or soft) plug typically has a longer and thinner tip insulator, with more ceramic tip exposed to combustion heat and less in contact with the plug body. This arrangement restricts heat dissipation and consequence loss of heat from the plug tip, meaning that the plug runs at a higher temperature.
A COLD (or hard) plug has typically less of the tip exposed and more in contact with the plug body; heat is dissipated more efficiently, allowing the plug to run cooler.
One main function of a spark plug is to transfer heat from the combustion chamber. The ceramic insulator disperses about 4% of the heat generated (the ridges on the insulator are not for cooling but to reduce the risk of electrical current ‘tracking’). Approximately 90% of heat dispersed through the plug is transferred through the thread and washer, with approximately 40% of total heat transference through the plug washer itself (correct fitting and tightening of the plug is important).
The ideal operating temperature of the central electrode is between 400° and 800°c. If the plug tip fails to reach this working temperature it is liable to become contaminated. Carbon and/or fuel/oil are liable to gather on the plug tip leading to an engine misfiring. The electrical current, that normally generates the spark, is ‘lazy’, taking the most readily available route to earth. A fouled plug gives the current an escape route, allowing the current to ‘track’ through the debris on the insulator tip before reaching the electrodes. In a misfiring engine the plug will tend to lose heat, through the leakage of current, this will, in turn, inhibit the ability of the plug to self-clean, and create a vicious circle of failure.