MrdB
15+ Year Contributor
- 52
- 0
- Jun 28, 2004
-
Chillicothe,
Ohio
i stoped by the advanced to get some new plugs and the guy in there was telling me about these new e3 plugs? that looks beast. but looks arent everything.. has any1 tryed them out?
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
For 1990-1999 Mitsubishi Eclipse, Eagle Talon, Plymouth Laser, and Galant VR-4 Owners. This is where the DSM platform history is documented and archived. Log in to help us in our mission, and to remove most ads from the browsing experience.
This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
malern28us said:Hey guys! No offense taken but I believe the topic was "has anyone tried them?" Opinions are like....well you know the rest.
malern28us said:I can honestly say I have used them. Would I recommend you using them? No way!
malern28us said:I am still trying to get in the "research group" of a local company trying to make sparkplugs with their own capacitors built in. I keep volunteering my vehicles with no luck yet. Until that day, I will continue to run Denso in my cars and motorcycles (and E3 in my mowers because they are the only ones that fit that were on the shelves)

I think all of us understood what the original question was asked. What we were trying to do was prevent him from using unproven "performance" plugs. Why do we tell the noobs to change their timing belts every 60,000 miles? To prevent them from future problems. We know what happens when you don't replace the belt, and we are informing them before they regret it. The same applies here. Go with something that has been proven to work over the years.
"I feel a great swell of pity for the poor [engines]" that are subjected to such testing.
If you must torture your vehicles... well, I don't really know what to say to that.





Ok guys think about this for a minute. If any of you have ever tuned an engine you'd pick this up real quick. The stoichiometric A/F ratio for gasoline is 14.7:1, you would never do this but lets just say that your engine was tuned for 14.7:1 A/F across the board. That means all of the fuel entering the combustion chamber is being burned. If all of the fuel is being burned in the combustion process, how can the spark plug increase efficiency?
It's all BS. Someone has to try and gather up the customers who saw through Splitfires.
2.7%? I defy you to touch anything on a car, and get dynomometer repeatability of any parameter within 5%. Let's put in a brand-new, properly-gapped set of any spark plug and see what the "improvement" is.
It's all BS. Someone has to try and gather up the customers who saw through Splitfires.
2.7%? I defy you to touch anything on a car, and get dynomometer repeatability of any parameter within 5%. Let's put in a brand-new, properly-gapped set of any spark plug and see what the "improvement" is.