TEXAS HEAT
Well-Known Member
Honestly @TheLion , I think you likely came across some less than good premium gas that lead to the detonation event that damaged your plug. If you scoped your cylinders and all looked good, I would think you're ok and just need to get a new set of plugs. NGK or even another set of the Brisk.Here's what I got from Brisk on their latest response:
According to them my particular engine is very clean burning, but if you notice there is a yellowish discoloration of the ceramic, aka heat discoloration. I asked them about the RR12S, but I'm guessing they will reply those are likely too cold.
BTW, I bent the ground electrode back to let the insulator slide out, it didn't come out of the engine like that. All three photos are of the same plug, in one photo I tipped plug up so the insulator slide back up and I could see the electrode. The other I tipped it down so the insulator slid back down. Then I pried the ground electrode up so I could see down inside the plug to see if I had blow out.
The knock event was certainly severe enough to crack the insulator that's for sure. BTW, anyone else have a bit of turbo whine at higher rpm? I noticed that after all this happened, but the real question is, was it already there and I'm just now noticing or did it occur after the knock event (remember I drove the car 30 some miles to get home with the misfire under light throttle).
My concern would be cooking the turbo or catalyst due to the un-burnt fuel from cylinder 4 feeding through the turbo and catalyst. The slight whine is about the only thing I've noticed, but only seems to occur at mid range and under light load (aka normal driving). Dead silent cruising at 2500 rpm in 6th, at idle, high rpm and WOT.
My oil is deffinately getting dirty (dark brown, but not black), 8200 miles now on the factory fill, yah yah yah, some of you will say I'm crazy, but I want those bearings / cams to be broken in.
Oil indicator still seems on par for a 10k change (says 20%), user manual doesn't call for first change until 10k or oil light and I have upgraded cooling. Also I've only used about a 1/2 quart, all of which pretty much ended up in the UPR can. Currently the oil level is right at the top of the hatch.
Getting crappy fuel unfortunately does happen from time to time which is why it's important to get your fuel from as few places as possible. If you have to fuel up at a location that you've never used, I would flash the 91 tune just to be safe until you can fuel up at your regular supplier.
I'm not going to knock your tuning choice because LMS has a solid reputation, but their tuning device leaves something to be desired.
Unknowingly having a detonation event that causes a plug fracture that could've possibly been prevented if you had an onboard monitoring device. It will definitely give you a heads up when you do get the occasional bad tank of gas before it leads to a component failure. Having this knowledge sooner rather than later is advantageous.
IMHO, I don't think the "set it and forget it" mentality applies with today's advanced turbocharged engines, especially when we're increasing cylinder pressures, advancing timing and running leaner a/f ratios in an attempt to maximize performance. We need to be aware of what's going on inside of our engines at all times, which is what being able to live monitor is all about.
FWIW, I changed my oil at 7000 miles and have not experienced any oil consumption issues. I'm at 11k miles now and have only drained .5oz from my CC and oil level still indicates full on the dipstick.
:cheers:
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