1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

cottagebound

Cadet
Joined
Jun 21, 2009
Messages
16
I have read numerous post that say to use different size spark plugs

Book says champion J4C
Champion site says J8C
when I bought the motor it had J6C in it.

Can anyone tell me which is the best to run in this motor. Also should the gap be .030.

Thanks

:)
 

Vic.S

Rear Admiral
Joined
May 4, 2004
Messages
4,719
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

J4C gapped at 0.030"
J6C are just slightly hotter.
The original gap was probably 0.040" but 0.030" is the current recommendation.
 

cottagebound

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Jun 21, 2009
Messages
16
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

It may be a stupid question

what does running a hotter plug like the j6c do
 

shaffer

Cadet
Joined
Apr 15, 2007
Messages
17
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

It just might burn a hole in a piston.Stick with j4c if you can find them.
 

Vic.S

Rear Admiral
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May 4, 2004
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4,719
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

using a very much hotter plug could well cause damage but the difference between J4C and J6c is not great. Sometimes the experienced folk on here suggest J6C rather than J4C for some engines
 

Vic.S

Rear Admiral
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Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

I believe they suggest it for certain models that are inclined to foul their plugs.
 

TN-25

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
May 27, 2008
Messages
620
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

A cooler plug means that the plug itself can transfer more heat away from the plug into the cylinder head (and the water jacket). A cooler plug can prevent pre-ignition when running at or near wide open throttle. Under those conditions combustion is hot enough to burn away deposits.

A hotter plug retains more heat on the plug. It is desireable if you do a lot of trolling since the hotter plug will burn away the deposits that accumulate when putting along, thus preventing plug fouling.

Running too hot a plug can result in pre-ignition, a situation where combustion happens too soon due to high heat in the chamber (it fires like a diesel). Combustion that happens too soon is very destructive to pistons & rods. It can scorch or even melt pistons, or break the ring lands off pistons, trashing the pistons, cylinders; in short the entire powerhead.

I'm trying to remember, but I seem to recall that a smaller insulater on the plug will alow the plug to throw heat into the surrounding water jackets to be carried away. A bigger insulator will inhibit the transfer of heat away from the plug.
 

kbait

Commander
Joined
Nov 13, 2007
Messages
2,471
Re: 1972 9.5 Which spark Plug

J4.. J6.. It won't matter. We're not talking space shuttle tolerences here. If it's tuned close, they'll both work fine, and you'd never notice a difference.
 
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