3rd Generation Specific (1993-2002) 1993-2002 Discussion including performance modifications and Technical Support Sections.
Sponsored by:

7 Eleven, not just for Big Gulps, SPARK PLUGS

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Nov 20, 2024 | 03:51 PM
  #201  
Howard Coleman's Avatar
Thread Starter
Racing Rotary Since 1983
Tenured Member: 20 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (7)
 
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 6,279
Likes: 728
From: Florence, Alabama
yes, i do believe the gap is the problem. they did work well mid 500 for a while...
Reply
Old Nov 20, 2024 | 04:57 PM
  #202  
mikejokich's Avatar
45 yrs of driving My 7's
Tenured Member: 10 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (2)
 
Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 534
Likes: 155
From: Alabama
Just putting it out there, I was the one who had the NGK 6601 plugs machined down the 2 mm on the collar to make them fit perfect. If there is enough interest, the machine shop owner is a friend of mine and I could take orders for plugs from everyone like a group buy, order a whole bunch of stock plugs at a discount, pay him to machine them, and make some profit for my trouble (a lot of work and hassle). They still would be quite expensive since the plugs are expensive to start with, around $22, and the machining would likely be about $20 per plug or even slightly more. Once you add shipping, tax in some states, and the profit, I'm thinking likely around $75 per plug. Not cheap at all but you only need two and they should last for quite a while, unlike the leading plugs most of us use.

Just a thought.
Mike

Last edited by mikejokich; Nov 20, 2024 at 04:58 PM. Reason: added something
Reply
Old Feb 2, 2025 | 07:08 PM
  #203  
Neutron's Avatar
Senior Member
Tenured Member: 10 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (10)
 
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 664
Likes: 95
From: AZ
Pretty interesting video with relevant info related to this topic!
Reply
Old Feb 3, 2025 | 06:33 AM
  #204  
Molotovman's Avatar
Ban Peak
Tenured Member: 20 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (50)
 
Joined: Jul 2002
Posts: 4,250
Likes: 550
From: Northern Virginia
Since this thread bumped I wanted to share that I had my car tuned in mid December with Denso IRE01-31 in the primary location and R6601-11 with trimmed shoulders in the trailing location. The car made 498hp/435tq on an E35 blend at 16# and 466hp/395tq on pump at 14#. There were zero complaints from the tuner on the plug combination and he was happy with them.
Reply
Old Feb 3, 2025 | 06:16 PM
  #205  
GoodfellaFD3S's Avatar
Original Gangster/Rotary!
Veteran: Army
Tenured Member: 25 Years
Liked
Loved
iTrader: (213)
 
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 30,807
Likes: 648
From: FL-->NJ/NYC again!
Originally Posted by Neutron
Pretty interesting video with relevant info related to this topic!
https://youtu.be/n_SW4o9bPqc?si=cvsFqmT8z-NFjyvQ
Not a fan of anything that comes out of that dudes mouth.

Originally Posted by Molotovman
Since this thread bumped I wanted to share that I had my car tuned in mid December with Denso IRE01-31 in the primary location and R6601-11 with trimmed shoulders in the trailing location. The car made 498hp/435tq on an E35 blend at 16# and 466hp/395tq on pump at 14#. There were zero complaints from the tuner on the plug combination and he was happy with them.
Yup, I've been a big advocate for the Denso Iridium plugs for many years now. With a proper tune, the 10 heat range work well a low 20s boost levels and are very resistant to fouling. Far superior to NGK anything in my experience
Reply
Old Mar 18, 2025 | 04:38 PM
  #206  
Neutron's Avatar
Senior Member
Tenured Member: 10 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (10)
 
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 664
Likes: 95
From: AZ
@mikejokich just wanted to mention I am definitely interested in purchasing machined r6601 plugs. If anyone else is interested they should post so that it is known. Otherwise they will not get made.
Reply
Old Jun 9, 2025 | 03:02 AM
  #207  
Tim Benton's Avatar
FD title holder since 94
Tenured Member: 25 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (1)
 
Joined: Mar 2001
Posts: 4,203
Likes: 37
From: Cedartown, Ga
And the SA31s are also out of stock as well it seems. Did find 4 on eBay though.

Last edited by Tim Benton; Jun 9, 2025 at 03:09 AM.
Reply
Old Sep 13, 2025 | 01:55 PM
  #208  
Rub20B's Avatar
Exhaust Manifold Leak
Tenured Member: 20 Years
Liked
 
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 815
Likes: 42
From: western europe
Originally Posted by Neutron
Just wanted to add that the NGK 6601-11 with the factory crush washer in the trailing are working out exceptional well for me! I am not sure anyone would need to do anything fancy, at least in the trailing location. I'm using Denso Iridium 5722 IRE01-34 11 in the leading gapped to .023. Power is really clean. Tuner mentioned it was much cleaner then my older setups and knock was extremely quite. Very very easy 600 whp on E85 with quite a bit more in it. Also limited it to 8k. I only stopped because my CPR motor only has about 1300 miles or so on it. Highlights of my setup are CPR built motor (thanks Howard!), Motec M150, M&W CDI and BW 9180SXE with 1.10 AR.
reading on the M&W manual they specify max plug gap of .65mm. That doesnt really seem to comply with the 6601. Did you experience any issues by running this large of a gap? Do you run the M&W coils? Cop or wires?
Reply
Old Sep 13, 2025 | 03:53 PM
  #209  
Neutron's Avatar
Senior Member
Tenured Member: 10 Years
Liked
Loved
Community Favorite
iTrader: (10)
 
Joined: Jul 2011
Posts: 664
Likes: 95
From: AZ
Originally Posted by Rub20B
reading on the M&W manual they specify max plug gap of .65mm. That doesnt really seem to comply with the 6601. Did you experience any issues by running this large of a gap? Do you run the M&W coils? Cop or wires?
The 6601 has a gap of .4mm. I did not experience any issues at all but the reach did bother me. I have been running the IRE01-34 11 in leading and trailing recently. I had been switching back and forth between RaceGrade IGN1A coils and the M&W Pro-14 with M&W coils since my engine harness has two separate ignition harnesses. One for CDI and another for the IGN1A's. I use custom made Magnecor R-100 wires on both setups. The last time I was at the dyno, my tuner wanted to try both. There was no doubt what so ever that the CDI was better. Cleaner and EGT's were noticeably cooler with everything being the same. This was using the same plugs on both setups, IRE01-34 11 gapped to .023 leading and trailing.
Reply
Old Sep 14, 2025 | 02:22 AM
  #210  
Rub20B's Avatar
Exhaust Manifold Leak
Tenured Member: 20 Years
Liked
 
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 815
Likes: 42
From: western europe
Very nice. I think the gap on the 6601 is more like 1.2-1.4mm range by the looks. The 0.4 must be a typo in the spec. Im also building a car and have a M&W CDI for it. For the leading it seems by reading this very good thread the IRE01-10 is among the best option. As some say on trailing the strap could become overheated therefore the S31A or 6601-10 could be a solution. The only doubt I had was that its wide gap could damage the CDI or Coils.
Reply
Old Sep 14, 2025 | 01:59 PM
  #211  
Rub20B's Avatar
Exhaust Manifold Leak
Tenured Member: 20 Years
Liked
 
Joined: Jun 2005
Posts: 815
Likes: 42
From: western europe
Originally Posted by scotty305
I might be thinking of this the wrong way, but it seems like a colder spark plug would transfer more heat into the rotor housing. I agree the tip of the plug should run cooler, but can someone help explain how that might affect the thermal expansion of the rotor housing near the spark plug opening?

Also, this thread from Barry Bordes seems relevant, I forget if I've linked it here before.
https://www.rx7club.com/3rd-generati...em-fix-989811/


GucciBravo, I've run ECUs and ignition coils and spark plugs on desktop test benches in the past, using simulated crank inputs to trick the ECU into triggering the coils. You're absolutely correct that the spark plugs get warm. I suspect it should be possible to measure the difference between CDI and IGN1A without even running an engine.
I also agree here that colder plugs will more then likely not (or if in the wrong way) affect the crowning of the rotor housing surface around the leading plug. Plug heat range gives a unit-less measure for how much heat transfer there is from either electrode towards the threads. Spark plug manufactures always select the hottest possible plug that will not exceed a given temperature limit that is previously set to guarantee the safety and durability of the electrodes. this way the plug has the greatest resistance to fouling. To do this they run a instrumented plug with a thermocouple fitted to one or both electrodes.

Here is an example of a M10 plug with an instrumented ground electrode.




Unlike intuition would tell, the peak temperature of the ground strap is not reached at peak torque or at peak power, at least not in the engine we ran this one in. it is a 500c/cylinder turbo DI engine, central injector and plug between exh valves. produces around 240hp/l on pump fuel. Y axis is bmep in bar. As one can see the hottest area is the point with the highest power while being stochiometric, when going richer the ground strap seems to benefit quite a bit from the cooling effect. the white islolines are lambda btw.




Apart from the visible design changes that could affect the heat transfer, the inside of the ground electrode can also be made in different ways giving more or less heat transfer. On this example of x ray of a failed electrode the center of the electrode is copper and the outer sheat is inconel and topped with a Platina tip. changing the cladding thickness of the inconel or the copper length or any other combination of materials has a big effect on how hot the tip gets. the same logic applied for the center electrode.



Reply
Related Topics
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
Howard Coleman
3rd Generation Specific (1993-2002)
97
Sep 13, 2015 01:01 PM
NCross
2nd Generation Specific (1986-1992)
10
Feb 21, 2007 09:21 PM
therotaryrocket
1st Generation Specific (1979-1985)
27
Jul 19, 2004 10:56 AM
weaklink
3rd Generation Specific (1993-2002)
5
May 15, 2003 01:59 PM




All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:54 PM.