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1Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Spark plugs Sat Mar 19, 2016 12:27 am

Holister

Holister
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Life time member
My sparkplugs (D7EA) get replaced every 10K km. That's not a routine I have, its when the SPs fail and it's always around that mark give or take a few hundred km. I first notice a slight roughness at startup and after a few days I can feel slightly more vibration thru the bars. I pull the plugs and they look fine... a nice colour, but when I put the meter on them it tells a different story. At least one will read over 100 ohm. Last time I had 3 dud SPs. I chuck the duds and throw 1 or 2 in the tail for emergencies. Never had to use them tho.

I'm now 8K klm into my present set of SPs and this week I get that roughness on startup. I pull the plugs to find 2 are dud. Bugger. I should have another 2K to go. Lucky I have a set I ordered online (half price) coming next week.

This just got me wondering....
What SPs do other members use? There are a few specialty type plugs available.
How often do you replace them?
Does any one else test their plugs with a DMM?

Cheers


__________________________________________________

1989 K100RT     VIN  0097367 (naked)  
1996 K1100RS   VIN  0451808
 Spark plugs Austra12    Fuel:  95 Octane
Engine Oil: Nulon Full Synthetic 15W50
Gear Box Oil:  Nulon Synthetic 75W90
    

2Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sat Mar 19, 2016 12:55 am

duck

duck
Life time member
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NGK DR7EIX. They only last about 40 or 50 thousand miles though.


__________________________________________________
Current stable:
86 Custom K100 (standard fairing, K75 Belly pan, Ceramic chromed engine covers, paralever)
K75 Frankenbrick (Paralever, K11 front end, hybrid ABS, K1100RS fairing, radial tires)
86 K75C Turbo w/ paralever
94 K1100RS
93 K1100LT
91 K1
93 K75S (K11 front end)
91 K75S (K1 front end)
14 Yamaha WR250R
98 Taxi Cab K1200RS
14 K1600GT
http://www.ClassicKBikes.com
    

3Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Mar 20, 2016 10:55 am

rawdonball

rawdonball
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Hey Kaptain - that's quite an eye opener given that I have same plugs as you run, on all my K bikes and I've only change one set of four plugs (yesterday)! I guess they all run so rough compared to yours that a little rougher goes un-noticed...

Tell me again about the theory? What should new plugs read? Do you start to pick up a drop in insulation resistance as the plug ages and is this associated with weaker spark due to leakage current instead of everything jumping the gap?


__________________________________________________
'88 K100RT, '86 K75C, '05 Yamaha TTR250
    

4Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Mar 20, 2016 7:21 pm

Two Wheels Better

Two Wheels Better
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The Japanese-made NGK D8EA (colder heat range than stock for a K) that I've used for yonks now, give me at least 25K kms before I replace them, and often I don't need to, but I'm in there doing a valve clearance check and the like.

I've not had such good luck with the US-made variety of other types of NGK sparkies for cars and bikes over the years. The Japanese versions don't seem to corrode while the US NGK's metal area lose their sheen and wear more quickly, too.

This is just what I've noticed, an empirical data of observation over the years, and not a technical exercise.


__________________________________________________
"A long ride is the answer to a question you will soon forget!" ~ Anonymous
1977 R75/7-100, '93 K11/K12 Big Block, '93 K1100RS, '95 R100 Mystic, '96 K1100RS, 2 x '98 K1200RS, '06 K1200R & '09 K1300GT
    

5Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Mon Mar 21, 2016 12:19 am

Rick G

Rick G
admin
admin
Check to see if you have been buying fakes
Spark plugs Fake10
Spark plugs Real10


__________________________________________________
"Man sacrifices his health in order to make money.
Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health.
And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived."   Dalai Lama


Bikes 1999 K1100 LT with a Big Block 1200
    

6Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Mon Mar 21, 2016 9:01 am

WoodyAUK75

WoodyAUK75
Silver member
Silver member
Wow, that's unreal Rick! I wonder if the local distributor got a shipment of fakes. I stopped using NGK about 10yrs ago after a couple of bad runs. The local servo gets me X5DCs and I change them when ever I can't remember how long ago I put them in. Then I keep the old ones under the seat because there's nothing wrong with them anyway.

    

7Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 6:04 am

Holister

Holister
Life time member
Life time member
rawdonball wrote:Hey Kaptain - that's quite an eye opener given that I have same plugs as you run, on all my K bikes and I've only change one set of four plugs (yesterday)! I guess they all run so rough compared to yours that a little rougher goes un-noticed...

Tell me again about the theory? What should new plugs read? Do you start to pick up a drop in insulation resistance as the plug ages and is this associated with weaker spark due to leakage current instead of everything jumping the gap?
Rawdon.... No theory. What I'm measuring is the continuity of the electrode in ohms. What happens is the electrode, somewhere along its length from the terminal nut at the top to the insulated tip at the bottom, breaks down and becomes resistive. I'll take an educated guess and say that is because of some minute fracture due to heat and vibration. The wider the fracture the higher the resistance. When the plug is cold its worse. As the plug heats up it seems to conduct better.
What I experience is a slightly harder start and rough idle which disappears when the engine is up to running temp although at higer rpm I feel a very slight increase in vibration. I can usually get about for another week or two but eventually one or more of the plugs will fail completely.
The point of my original post is that I think I should be getting better milage out of a set of plugs.

I've taken some pics of my latest test to show what I'm talking about. These plugs have done 8K km. They're clean and showing no sign of electrode wear. You wouldn't expect any at 8K. If anything I think they look like she's running a little lean. I think my TB rubbers are leaking. #3 looks slightly dirty but that's another issue.Spark plugs Sparkp19

With The DMM set to 200 ohms scale, attach one probe to the terminal nut and probe the insulated electrode with the other. You might need to clean it off or scratch the surface with the probe. As a reference, when you touch the probes together you'll get around 0.3 ohms ie; no resistance apart from a very small amount in the probe wires.
Spark plugs Sparkp20
Spark plugs Sparkp21
Spark plugs Sparkp22
Spark plugs Sparkp23

Testing for earth leakage using a DMM is not a viable test because HT votages will easily overcome high resitance. A DMM is operating at less than 9V.


__________________________________________________

1989 K100RT     VIN  0097367 (naked)  
1996 K1100RS   VIN  0451808
 Spark plugs Austra12    Fuel:  95 Octane
Engine Oil: Nulon Full Synthetic 15W50
Gear Box Oil:  Nulon Synthetic 75W90
    

8Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 6:42 am

rawdonball

rawdonball
Gold member
Gold member
Great post thanks 'My Kaptain"

My K100RS '85 with its brand new set of NGK D7EA plugs from motobins (have I got that right?) is taking multiple goes to get it to idle. It fires early but dies as soon as I touch the throttle - seems like I have the cold is bad / warmer improves, syndrome you were describing..

Now to find my DMM!!!!


__________________________________________________
'88 K100RT, '86 K75C, '05 Yamaha TTR250
    

9Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 7:39 am

charlie99

charlie99
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you may have one or several issues ...looking at plug 3 to start with it looks about right ...perhaps a just a tad rich ... but considering the rest there is something wrong

the rest look to be running lean to blazes ...that in itself will cook a plug very quickly ...perhaps a cooler heat range might be in order till you find the core issue ...for the mix you are presenting to the cylinders and the plug cables - coils are sorted .


meanwhile sorry to say But your testing method is completely flawed  .

if a parallel resistance is to earth it could read anything , and it looks that way to me that you've shown in the pics . please tell me that you weren't touching the earthy side as well as the central electrode ??!!


1> you should test the thimble to central electrode  WITHOUT TOUCHING THE GROUND ELECTRODE AT ALL . else parallel resistances can confuse the issue . I would expect the resistances to be in the lowish hundreds of ohms if faulty  and nearly zero if ok 1.1 ohms sounds about right on a non resistive type plug .




2> you should be testing the central electrode to the earthy side ...I would be expecting meg ohms to hundreds of thousands of ohms resistance but obviously it has baked carbon deep down in there ..away from the tip  who knows what it is really.
 
plugs will suffer from overheating and go partially open circuit as the copper electrode melts inside the ceramic from the extreme temps of a lean plug .

yes your right you cannot expect to see the real resistances under compression load ...without a high voltage source

a multi meter is not the right way to go in this case ...it can prove there is a short or open circuit at low voltage ....but that's it ...at 30,000 volts it means bugger all

point in hand, remember the rd 250 and 350 yamahas ...to flood them is quite easy ....to measure that flood across the plugs was impossible with a multi meter ....

put in fresh plugs and away you go,  till the old ones died out or were cleaned

this is aimed at d7ea plugs ...not dr7ea   which have about 5000 ohms built in with carbon before the electrode in the combustion chamber


__________________________________________________
cheezy grin whilst riding, kinda bloke ....oh the joy !!!! ...... ( brick aviator )

'86 K100 RT..#0090401 ..."Gerty" ( Gertrude Von Clickandshift ) --------O%O
'86 k100 rs.. #######..  "Fred " (f(rame) red ) ( Fredrick leichtundschnell ) - -
bits and pieces from many kind friends across the k100 world ...with many thanks ..
1987 k100rs ########   "Red"  - (red sports rs TWB style )
1989 K100rt #009637   "Black Betty"  (naked rt ala Nigel , now sporting an rs main fairing )
    

10Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 9:50 am

Holister

Holister
Life time member
Life time member
charlie99 wrote:you may have one or several issues ...looking at plug 3 to start with it looks about right ...perhaps a just a tad rich ... but considering the rest there is something wrong

the rest look to be running lean to blazes ...that in itself will cook a plug very quickly ...perhaps a cooler heat range might be in order till you find the core issue ...for the mix you are presenting to the cylinders and the plug cables - coils are sorted .
Yep. I did say they were lean. I've been thinking about trying a D8EA. I tested my leads and coils early last year with a good result. Might look at that again, but leads will be replaced shortly.

meanwhile sorry to say But your testing method is completely flawed  . With great respect charlie, I don't think so

if a parallel resistance is to earth it could read anything , and it looks that way to me that you've shown in the pics . please tell me that you weren't touching the earthy side as well as the central electrode ??!!
Nothing was earthed. In those photos I was not touching the SPs. Probe was clipped to the threaded top. I tested them several times and got the same result even after running the bike for a few days in between. I can assure you I am very familiar with using a DMM and testing procedures.

1> you should test the thimble to central electrode  WITHOUT TOUCHING THE GROUND ELECTRODE AT ALL . else parallel resistances can confuse the issue . I would expect the resistances to be in the lowish hundreds of ohms if faulty  and nearly zero if ok 1.1 ohms sounds about right on a non resistive type plug.
NO WHERE IN THOSE PHOTOS DO YOU SEE ME TOUCHING THE ELECTRODE OR GROUND.
The faulty ones ARE in the "lowish hundreds of ohms".... That's where I'd expect the resistance values to be also.
As far as I can remember, all the new SPs I've measured were < 0.5 ohms


2> you should be testing the central electrode to the earthy side ...I would be expecting meg ohms to hundreds of thousands of ohms resistance but obviously it has baked carbon deep down in there ..away from the tip  who knows what it is really.
Correct. But any breakdown of the ceramic insulation would be difficult to detect/measure with a DMM. You'd need a mega to do that. Any resistance you could measure with a DMM would be in the megohm range, as you say, but would mean the plug had already stopped working by that stage.
plugs will suffer from overheating and go partially open circuit as the copper electrode melts inside the ceramic from the extreme temps of a lean plug .

yes your right you cannot expect to see the real resistances under compression load ...without a high voltage source

a multi meter is not the right way to go in this case ...it can prove there is a short or open circuit at low voltage ....but that's it ...at 30,000 volts it means bugger all
Its simply a test to determine the integrity of the SP electrode which I think is quite valid, in the same way you measure the resistance in a lead or coil using a DMM

point in hand, remember the rd 250 and 350 yamahas ...to flood them is quite easy ....to measure that flood across the plugs was impossible with a multi meter ....

put in fresh plugs and away you go,  till the old ones died out or were cleaned Yes. I remember the old RD very well but I haven't a clue about measuring the "flood accross the plugs"

this is aimed at d7ea plugs ...not dr7ea   which have about 5000 ohms built in with carbon before the electrode in the combustion chamber I mentioned I was using D7EA in my OP
Thanks for your input charlie. I think you're right. She's running a bit lean. probably more than I thought. The old girl is coming up for a make-over very shortly. Will be stripping her down to tidy up a few odds and ends such as replace the TB rubbers, new HT leads and a few other jobs.
I've always thought she ran a little hot so this, as you say, is probably why the plugs are not lasting. I might try a set of cooler plugs in the meantime.
Cheers mate Very Happy


__________________________________________________

1989 K100RT     VIN  0097367 (naked)  
1996 K1100RS   VIN  0451808
 Spark plugs Austra12    Fuel:  95 Octane
Engine Oil: Nulon Full Synthetic 15W50
Gear Box Oil:  Nulon Synthetic 75W90
    

11Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 11:02 am

92KK 84WW Olaf

avatar
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I have been using NGK D8EA on the advice of a well known local guy and never had an issue with these. Using them 6 years so go right ahead,


__________________________________________________
1992 K100LT 0193214 Bertha Blue 101,000 miles
1984 K100RT 0022575 Brutus Baja Red 578 bought 36,000 now 89,150 miles
1997 K1100LT 0188024 Wotan Mystic Red 689 58,645 now 106,950 miles Deceased.
1983 K100RS 0011157 Fricka 606 Alaska Blue 29,495 miles Damn K Pox Its a Bat outta Hell Now 58,200 miles. 
1996 K1100LT 0233004 Lohengrin Mystic Red 38,000 miles currently 51,800 miles.
1983 K100RS 0004449 Odette R100 colours 58,000 miles. Sprint fairing now 63,390 miles

Past:
1968 Yamaha 80 YG1
1971 Yamaha 125 YAS-1
1968 Honda 125 SS
1970 Honda CD 175
1973 Honda CB500-4
Honda CX 500
    

12Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 3:22 pm

charlie99

charlie99
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1> you should test the thimble to central electrode  WITHOUT TOUCHING THE GROUND ELECTRODE AT ALL . else parallel resistances can confuse the issue . I would expect the resistances to be in the lowish hundreds of ohms if faulty  and nearly zero if ok 1.1 ohms sounds about right on a non resistive type plug.
NO WHERE IN THOSE PHOTOS DO YOU SEE ME TOUCHING THE ELECTRODE OR GROUND.
The faulty ones ARE in the "lowish hundreds of ohms".... That's where I'd expect the resistance values to be also.
As far as I can remember, all the new SPs I've measured were < 0.5 ohms






sorry nigel it looked to me as if you were touching the side electrode and the central electrode at the same time ....the side electrode is the earthy side or ground electrode   which I why I posted in the first place

sorry for the rant everybody

Spark plugs Sparkp10

I appreciate manipulating the spark plug is rather difficult  and getting the multimeter and probe in frame as well
perhaps a better picture like this could have helped delineate the central to the side electrode measurement ?

Spark plugs 20160310

I get what you trying to do but could be confusing to newbies without prior experience ?


this plug by the way ...with 20,000 ks on it measured about 1.9 meg ohms but still works ...sorta kinda

Spark plugs 20160311


__________________________________________________
cheezy grin whilst riding, kinda bloke ....oh the joy !!!! ...... ( brick aviator )

'86 K100 RT..#0090401 ..."Gerty" ( Gertrude Von Clickandshift ) --------O%O
'86 k100 rs.. #######..  "Fred " (f(rame) red ) ( Fredrick leichtundschnell ) - -
bits and pieces from many kind friends across the k100 world ...with many thanks ..
1987 k100rs ########   "Red"  - (red sports rs TWB style )
1989 K100rt #009637   "Black Betty"  (naked rt ala Nigel , now sporting an rs main fairing )
    

13Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 10:27 pm

rawdonball

rawdonball
Gold member
Gold member
"What happens is the electrode, somewhere along its length from the terminal nut at the top to the insulated tip at the bottom, breaks down and becomes resistive"

Good sentence this Kaptain - goes well with Charles99's clarification.

Should get my DMM back today - left it in a car which I then lent to a mate! What hope is there for some of us 'youngsters'...


__________________________________________________
'88 K100RT, '86 K75C, '05 Yamaha TTR250
    

14Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Tue Mar 22, 2016 11:55 pm

Holister

Holister
Life time member
Life time member
Charlie. I realise now the point you were trying to make. My probe was in contact with the outer earth electrode. I thought you were refering to me 'touching' parts of the SP (fingers) but I can assure you that nothing was in contact with the ground/shell of the SP. The SP earth was totaly isolated so it did not affect the reading from the centre electrode. Also I had earlier done the measurement ensuring the earth electrode was not in contact... same result. The photos may have been a little misleading (I normally pay attention to those sorts of detail) but I stand by the readings as shown in each. I repeated them several times and they are the same.

I started my bike this morning and the #2 Sp is now totaly open circuit. Fortunately, about an hour later my mail order SPs arrived. How's that for timing. 🤡 but unfortunately they are D7EAs. I'll see what I can find locally. I think SuperCheap Auto have the 8s.

Cheers


__________________________________________________

1989 K100RT     VIN  0097367 (naked)  
1996 K1100RS   VIN  0451808
 Spark plugs Austra12    Fuel:  95 Octane
Engine Oil: Nulon Full Synthetic 15W50
Gear Box Oil:  Nulon Synthetic 75W90
    

15Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Wed Mar 23, 2016 6:29 am

charlie99

charlie99
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yes seen them there

it might be time to check the fpr captain

and possibly a leaky injector ?  or a good clean up of all the injectors as a first point service ?


__________________________________________________
cheezy grin whilst riding, kinda bloke ....oh the joy !!!! ...... ( brick aviator )

'86 K100 RT..#0090401 ..."Gerty" ( Gertrude Von Clickandshift ) --------O%O
'86 k100 rs.. #######..  "Fred " (f(rame) red ) ( Fredrick leichtundschnell ) - -
bits and pieces from many kind friends across the k100 world ...with many thanks ..
1987 k100rs ########   "Red"  - (red sports rs TWB style )
1989 K100rt #009637   "Black Betty"  (naked rt ala Nigel , now sporting an rs main fairing )
    

16Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 5:19 am

klompy the grey brick

klompy the grey brick
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Hi guys I believe I know the difference between DR8EA and D8EA the inbuilt resistance suited to the coil that is either 12 or 9 volt....ok I know a bit about it.....so why does NGK tell me to install DR7EA or DR8EA for my K1100 and some of you folk run the no resisted versions.

As pauline would say "Please explain"

Cheers Klompy


__________________________________________________
KKlompy Spark plugs 2854237993
"Grace" 1984 K100RS Silver VIN 0019026 Mitt eine Staintune Zorst.
"Olivia" 1997 K1100LT Dark Grey VIN WB1052600W0237453.









Chassis number0019026
Vehicle code0503
SeriesK589
ModelK 100 RS 83 (0502 ( 0503 )
Body typeK 100 RS 83 (0502
Catalog modelECE
Production date1984 / 07
Engine0513)

Spark plugs Au-log10


    

17Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 5:48 am

92KK 84WW Olaf

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Life time member
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As far as I remember, after being corrected on the forum is that the 16 valve engines use the resistor plugs, denoted by the R in the code. 8 valve engines do not, the plug leads differ and incorporate the resistors.

I have D8EA in my K100 [8 valve] and can't seem to find D7EA here. They are cheap and cheerful but do not seem to have a very long life.


__________________________________________________
1992 K100LT 0193214 Bertha Blue 101,000 miles
1984 K100RT 0022575 Brutus Baja Red 578 bought 36,000 now 89,150 miles
1997 K1100LT 0188024 Wotan Mystic Red 689 58,645 now 106,950 miles Deceased.
1983 K100RS 0011157 Fricka 606 Alaska Blue 29,495 miles Damn K Pox Its a Bat outta Hell Now 58,200 miles. 
1996 K1100LT 0233004 Lohengrin Mystic Red 38,000 miles currently 51,800 miles.
1983 K100RS 0004449 Odette R100 colours 58,000 miles. Sprint fairing now 63,390 miles

Past:
1968 Yamaha 80 YG1
1971 Yamaha 125 YAS-1
1968 Honda 125 SS
1970 Honda CD 175
1973 Honda CB500-4
Honda CX 500
    

18Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 6:53 am

charlie99

charlie99
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klompy

the k1100 and 16 valve units have a very different coil impedance on the primary ...thus making the secondary a higher voltage to the plugs
yes the k1100s do have the same resistive type leads,  but the ignition durations and current available is a little different because of the step up ratio

so lets predict that the wattage available from the lower primaries is higher ...ie 12 divided by 1.5 ohms (or something ) gives a current of about 6 amps x 12 volts = 72 watts   pulsing ...where as the k100 is somewhere less ... the amount of spark energy available can be further current limited by the r series plugs  so that a higher spark voltage is achieved ..( but a little less current involved )  which could make the electrodes last longer as the pitting phenomenon is less pronounced ...and the mixture is differently mapped once you go to the motronic rather than the le jetronic  computers and the extra induction available on the 4 valve  / per cylinder valve units

does that help ?


__________________________________________________
cheezy grin whilst riding, kinda bloke ....oh the joy !!!! ...... ( brick aviator )

'86 K100 RT..#0090401 ..."Gerty" ( Gertrude Von Clickandshift ) --------O%O
'86 k100 rs.. #######..  "Fred " (f(rame) red ) ( Fredrick leichtundschnell ) - -
bits and pieces from many kind friends across the k100 world ...with many thanks ..
1987 k100rs ########   "Red"  - (red sports rs TWB style )
1989 K100rt #009637   "Black Betty"  (naked rt ala Nigel , now sporting an rs main fairing )
    

19Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 6:55 am

Rick G

Rick G
admin
admin
The ignition systems are very different and using DR7EA will keep the coils very happy.


__________________________________________________
"Man sacrifices his health in order to make money.
Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health.
And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived."   Dalai Lama


Bikes 1999 K1100 LT with a Big Block 1200
    

20Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 7:01 am

92KK 84WW Olaf

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Life time member
Life time member
RicK G wrote:The ignition systems are very different and using DR7EA will keep the coils very happy.

For the K1100RS....


__________________________________________________
1992 K100LT 0193214 Bertha Blue 101,000 miles
1984 K100RT 0022575 Brutus Baja Red 578 bought 36,000 now 89,150 miles
1997 K1100LT 0188024 Wotan Mystic Red 689 58,645 now 106,950 miles Deceased.
1983 K100RS 0011157 Fricka 606 Alaska Blue 29,495 miles Damn K Pox Its a Bat outta Hell Now 58,200 miles. 
1996 K1100LT 0233004 Lohengrin Mystic Red 38,000 miles currently 51,800 miles.
1983 K100RS 0004449 Odette R100 colours 58,000 miles. Sprint fairing now 63,390 miles

Past:
1968 Yamaha 80 YG1
1971 Yamaha 125 YAS-1
1968 Honda 125 SS
1970 Honda CD 175
1973 Honda CB500-4
Honda CX 500
    

21Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 7:21 am

klompy the grey brick

klompy the grey brick
VIP
VIP
and K1100LT :O)


__________________________________________________
KKlompy Spark plugs 2854237993
"Grace" 1984 K100RS Silver VIN 0019026 Mitt eine Staintune Zorst.
"Olivia" 1997 K1100LT Dark Grey VIN WB1052600W0237453.









Chassis number0019026
Vehicle code0503
SeriesK589
ModelK 100 RS 83 (0502 ( 0503 )
Body typeK 100 RS 83 (0502
Catalog modelECE
Production date1984 / 07
Engine0513)

Spark plugs Au-log10


    

22Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 9:28 am

Rick G

Rick G
admin
admin
Yeah both


__________________________________________________
"Man sacrifices his health in order to make money.
Then he sacrifices money to recuperate his health.
And then he is so anxious about the future that he does not enjoy the present; the result being that he does not live in the present or the future; he lives as if he is never going to die, and then dies having never really lived."   Dalai Lama


Bikes 1999 K1100 LT with a Big Block 1200
    

23Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 7:41 pm

Gaz

Gaz
Life time member
Life time member
As a useful reference for this discussion, here is page 74 of the BMW Riders Manual for the K1100 RS/LT regarding spark plugs.

Spark plugs Image15

The cross reference to NGK is DR7EA and like Rick G my bike has been happy having used these for 100,000km on my K1100LT changed at intervals such as "gee it's a fair while since I've changed the plugs" and have had no trouble.

Cheers


__________________________________________________
Gaz
1990 K75 6427509; 1987 R80G/S PD 6292136; 2010 G650GS ZW13381; 95 K1100LT 0232224
    

24Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Jul 10, 2016 8:58 pm

Dai

Dai
Life time member
Life time member
Gaz80 wrote:changed at intervals such as "gee it's a fair while since I've changed the plugs" and have had no trouble.
You too eh? Very Happy


__________________________________________________
1983 K100 naked upgraded to K100LT spec after spending time as an RS and an RT
1987 K100RT
Others...
1978 Moto Guzzi 850-T3, 1979 Moto Guzzi 850-T3 California,1993 Moto Guzzi 1100ie California
2020 Royal Enfield Bullet 500
    

25Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty The Green Spark Plug Company Sun Nov 12, 2023 5:51 pm

Tranberg

Tranberg
active member
active member
I might as well dig up this old topic.

Looking for NGK DR7EIX iridium plugs in Europe and The Green Spark Plug Company comes up as the cheapest supplyer by far.

Is it a scam, or are they legit?

    

26Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Nov 12, 2023 6:44 pm

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
I would say they are legit.  I use the NGK Iridium plugs in one of my cars and they are good for 100K+ miles.  Regular NGK plugs usually have the gap opening up somewhere around 20,000 miles.  Back in the 70's I had a Champion gold palladium plug that Champion gave me.  I ran that plug for 6 years in 3 different bikes for a total of 50,000 miles competing in enduros.  The gap never changed in all that time and the plug always fired. 

Where I get my spark plugs now the price for Iridium is about 5x the price of the regular copper core plugs so the cost per mile is similar.  The only advantage is that you don't have to change the iridium plugs as often which is a plus on the car because they are a bit of a pain to access. 

I see no advantage to iridium on my present bike because they are fairly easy to get at, and it takes about 3-4 years now to get 20,000 miles on them.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

27Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Sun Nov 12, 2023 8:43 pm

Dai

Dai
Life time member
Life time member
They're definately legit - I've bought from them as they also advertise on ebay. I got a pack of 25 brass sparkplug nuts for about £5, IIRC.


__________________________________________________
1983 K100 naked upgraded to K100LT spec after spending time as an RS and an RT
1987 K100RT
Others...
1978 Moto Guzzi 850-T3, 1979 Moto Guzzi 850-T3 California,1993 Moto Guzzi 1100ie California
2020 Royal Enfield Bullet 500
    

28Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Mon Nov 13, 2023 4:48 am

Tranberg

Tranberg
active member
active member
Good to hear. I rummaged through my own old postings on another bike forum, and found out that I actually bought my Iridium plugs from them e few years back - before Brexit, when it wasn't such a hassle.

I don't expect much if any improvement over regular new plugs on the relatively modern K75, it didn't do anything for my Burgman 650, whereas it made an appreciable difference in starting and low end performance on my Honda Innova 125, with its less than ideal combustion chamber design.

    

29Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:02 am

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
For what it's worth, there is a show on the Motor Trend channel called Engine Masters where they test various engine performance stuff on drag racing engines running on an engine dyno. 

Last week the show did a comparison of a number of different spark plug brands and types on a large block high performance LS engine with high performance ignition, racing cam, Quadrajet carburetor and headers. 

What they found was that on a 700hp engine the difference in performance measured in torque and hp output was less than 0.7%(which is essentially in the error range of run-to-run dyno parameters), and the highest output was from plain vanilla Autolite plugs from the local discount store.  

The NGK irridium plugs in the test were right in the middle of the pack as far as hp output.  As I recall, the regular NGK plugs produced something like 4hp less than the Autolite, and the NGK irridium produced 3hp less than the Autolite.

The main hp difference was at redline, and the curves at lower engine speeds were virtually identical.  The verdict at the end of the show was that a spark is a spark is a spark.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

30Back to top Go down   Spark plugs Empty Re: Spark plugs Mon Nov 13, 2023 9:23 am

Point-Seven-five

Point-Seven-five
Life time member
Life time member
One very interesting finding in the test was that it appeared that electrode gap had a greater effect on power output than the brand or type of plug. 

On the Autolite plugs they messed around with the gap and found that a wider than spec gap increased the peak hp by something like 10-12hp which was a bigger change than what they got by changing brands or types.

Of course, the plugs were firing on a high performance ignition system, but what it showed was that a longer spark from a wider gap will have a small but measurable effect on maximum engine output.


__________________________________________________
Present: 1991 K100RS "Moby Brick Too"
 
Past:
1994 K75RT "Ilsa, She Wolf of the SS"
1988 K100RS SE "Special Ed"
1994 K75S "Cheetos"
1992 K100RS "Moby Brick" R.I.P.
1982 Honda FT500
1979 Honda XR185
1977 Honda XL125
1974 Honda XL125
1972 OSSA Pioneer 250
1968 Kawasaki 175
    

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