Post YOUR testing that validates this.
You can’t? Why not?
Is it because you don’t test anything? Is it because you accept anything written in books and magazines as Gospel truth and never consider there could be ulterior motives?
I have tested it.
Big plug gaps do NOT clean up a rough idle.
Big plug gaps do NOT make more horsepower. In reality, as horsepower goes up the gap needs to tighten up. Why you ask? Well because most guys making horsepower are using higher rpm than 6,000.
As the time to fire each plug gets less as rpm goes up, the spark naturally gets weaker. Oopsie. It’s the nature of the system.
As horsepower goes up, generally so does combustion chamber turbulence. And, smart engine builders find ways to increase combustion chamber efficiency by speeding up the burn rate and increasing turbulence.
Of course, when that happens you increase the probability that the literal hurricane in the combustion chamber (from increased turbulence) will blow the spark right out. Oopsie again.
So how do we deal with the spark getting blown out of that .080 gap? That’s right, WE CLOSE UP THE GAP until the ignition has enough energy to fire the gap. Oopsie.
And what else do we know? We know that opening the plug gap on any decent 7 series ignition box from say .035 to let’s say .060ish will at best show zero increase in power. I test it. It’s the same every time. Going over .035-.040 gap at best shows no hp loss.
Once you are above about 1.7 hp/cid you’ll start losing power with a .045 gap. At a .060 gap it’s about 1.5 hp/cid depending on combustion chamber geometry, quench area, inlet air temperature, fuel stratification and a bunch of **** I don’t understand.
That the facts^^^^^^^^^
Now, what do we know about what happens when we open the plug gaps more than ignition energy can fire? We know, for a fact it plays hell with the cap, rotor and wires. We also know if the gap is wider than the ignition can fire the spark WILL find or make a leak and the spark will go there rather than the plug.
Ooopsie big time.
And what happens when that spark jumps from let’s say the number 5 cylinder to number 7 cylinder?
That is correct. The Ooopsie is now firing the number 7 plug out of time (way too early) and damed if we don’t get detonation on old cylinder 7. Ooopsie. Again.
If we let it go long enough we push the head gasket out. Or if the gasket is tough enough we start abusing the piston and the rings and the ring land starts lifting. And/or you start softening the center of the piston. Eventually that little Ooopsie is now a nice hole in the piston. Yeah big gaps are the ticket to paradise.
Or maybe it starts back siding the piston. That is the non thrust side of the piston is scuffed but the thrust side is not scuffed.
It’s time to stop making horrible claims about plug gaps. I’ve tested it so many times it’s just stupid.
And, the weaker the ignition the sooner the gap needs to get tighter before you incur a misfire.