Tempest plug instructions make absolutely no mention about there being a “correct” orientation for spark plug gaskets. If they don’t even mention it in their spark plug installation guide at all in any manner, it can’t be anything more than an old wives tale.
Regardless of what Tempest does, the FAA addresses it and flat side toward the plug is the *only* approved way to do it.
There would be some upset owners if a mech required replacement of the spark plug gaskets at every R&R that position would surely apply to spark plug gasket CHT probes too.
The rings on a CHT sensor are harder and less likely to deform, and it's just one potential bad seal out of 8 on a 4 cylinder engine. That said if it were cost effective to replace them they probably would. A larger issue is that CHT numbers in most flight manuals are based on bayonet probes, not spark plug ring probes and the latter usually read 25-50 degrees high.
I don't know why owners would be upset if a mechanic required new gaskets ever time a spark plug was removed or replaced. Spark plug gaskets are cheap. I buy them by the 100 pack for about $30.00. That's $0.60 per cylinder, a total of $2.40 every 50 hours, or $0.048 per tach hour, and probably down around $0.04 per flight hour. I'd be more upset if a mechanic wasn't following approved practices. What else is he cutting corners on?
I did this verbatim. The only question is does the flat side of the gasket go on the spark plug side, the cylinder side, or it's not the end of the world either way?
My understanding is that when the flat (sharp edged) side is placed against the aluminum cylinder head it can start to cut into the head, which creates a stress riser. Is that a big deal? Maybe, maybe not. But since:
- cylinders are expensive;
- spark plug gaskets are cheap;
- the FAA approved and *requirted* method is flat side toward the plug; and
- it's just as easy to do it the right was as it is to do it the wrong way;
why is there even a question about what side faces the cylinder?