What’s the typical lifespan one can expect out of a plug? We’ve got 200hrs on a set of Champion 38E’s. I’d like to just replace them all as preventative maintenance. How much more time can we realistically expect?
From a preventative mx standpoint, all things equal, I usually recommended 400 hours on massive plugs and double that on fine plugs. Didn't mess with fine wire plugs much so that figure maybe a tad low but 1000 hr would be a max number in my book. Regardless, those numbers are heavily dependent on your operational style and regular mx of the plugs.I’d like to just replace them all as preventative maintenance.
Well, spark plugs(massives) used to be relatively cheap, $25 or so. I think it’s more with the condition & care. I’d think massives could go 400 hours or so, on average. The normal procedure is to clean, inspect, re-gap, then fresh thread anti-seize.
One could inspect, maybe test resistance, replace any as needed.
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Auburn had a 400-hour warranty on their plugs, and I routinely got 800 hours out of them. Champion bought them and shut them down. Arrrgh.
If you can use REM37BY or tempest UREM37BY, I would do that. Very fouling-resistant. Check the Tempest plug applicability chart for your engine.
37BY at the top, typical 38E or 40E below it. I think they also give a little better performance, getting the spark farther out into the mixture.
That is a beautiful picture of a electrode and the wear/erosion that occurs.Well, spark plugs(massives) used to be relatively cheap, $25 or so. I think it’s more with the condition & care. I’d think massives could go 400 hours or so, on average. The normal procedure is to clean, inspect, re-gap, then fresh thread anti-seize.
One could inspect, maybe test resistance, replace any as needed.
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Aircraft Spruce shows the same price for Tempest UREM40E v UREM37BY @ $33.55 per spark plug. The Tempest Application Guide has both of those listed for my engine. Is there a reason the mechanics have so far been continuing to use the UREM40E or is it more likely that they are just using what is already in there without consideration to a change?If you can use REM37BY or tempest UREM37BY, I would do that. Very fouling-resistant. Check the Tempest plug applicability chart for your engine.
More than likely this. It might also depend on how proactive the mechanics are. Perhaps ask them directly and compare their input to what was discussed here?or is it more likely that they are just using what is already in there without consideration to a change?
We had an O-235 in a Citabria. They run really cool, and foul their plugs quickly in the flight-training world. Sometimes we'd have to clean those plugs less than 50 hours after the last cleaning. I put the UREM37BYs in it and the fouling stopped completely and forever.I use the 37BY spark plugs in everything they fit. With the exception of a couple o-235 engines, I’ve never had to clean one.
The spark plug cleaners use silicon carbide grit. That stuff is hard, sharp and erodes the electrodes. I went to using the bead blaster, using glass bead, which cleans without so much erosion. But one has to carefully, with a light and magnifier or strong reading glasses, make sure that no bead is wedged into the bottom of the plug well where the ceramic meets the steel. Bead is tiny and white and hard to spot otherwise, and if it falls out into the cylinder you get scoring. If carbide grit gets into your cylinder, the scoring is FAR worse.P
I’m not a fan of abrasive cleaning.
The center electrode will wear like that, but the outer electrodes also erode. Which one get it worst depends on the plug's firing polarity, which is why we rotate plugs when we clean them. Magnetos are AC devices, firing one plug center positive, the next plug center negative. IIRC it's the positive electrodes that get eroded the fastest.The electrode on massive plugs tend to wear down to an ellipse shape. I've seen it referenced many times that you replace massive plugs when the minor radius is 1/2 the major radius.
Ellipse Calculator - Monolithic Dome Institute
Lycomings don't have the big fouling problem that the small Continentals do (up to the O-300). The lower plugs in the Continental cylinders are very close to the bottom of the bore, and the oil that gets past the rings during idle (due to the closed throttle creating terrific suction on the cylinder's intake stroke) will flow into the plugs and get baked in there. The runup before shutdown helps scavenge that oil out.I haven't had a fouled plug in 100s of hours. As Magman stated, following Lycoming's run-up and shutdown procedures helps prevent fouling. While I'm not sure of Lycoming's run-up suggestions, I do follow their shutdown procedure. Since I lean <b>aggressively</b> on the ground, step one is covered. At the hangar I goose the throttle for 20-30 seconds while turning tail toward hangar, then shutdown with mixture.
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In my prior life 112 plugs required some monitoring. Even with the Ignition Analyzer ( Chinese Television? ) we did post flight run ups to assure next flight readiness.