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35k miles spark plugs swap

Discussion in '2nd Gen. Tacomas (2005-2015)' started by Tacomatrd15, May 10, 2018.

  1. May 10, 2018 at 10:37 AM
    #1
    Tacomatrd15

    Tacomatrd15 [OP] Member

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    I decided to swap out the spark plugs in my '15 Tacoma, took no more than an hour to do... But definitely saved myself some money by doing it myself. And of course all of you already know this about Toyota that it has two different brand of spark plugs installed by the dealer (NGK driver side and Denso on passenger side). Weird thing I noticed after removing the old spark plugs was that the NGKs wore out to .054-.056 and Denso all wore out evenly to .049 while the maintenance manual Gap settings is to be .043. maybe installed at different gaps? Or material durability between those spark plugs.... Another thing I noticed was that passenger side cylinders (1,3,5) are running rich in fuel mixture while driver's side cylinders 2,4,6 were running a bit lean... I wonder if Toyota does that for a reason.... But now I'm definitely looking into Dyno tuning my truckIMG_20180510_100939439.jpg
     
    WPNZ, kimo, scottalot and 1 other person like this.
  2. May 10, 2018 at 10:40 AM
    #2
    knottyrope

    knottyrope Well-Known Member

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    Pads, rotors, ujoints, 5900K Super White Xenon HID Halogen Bulb Fog Light
    I save even more money by gapping them and putting them back in.

    Original OEM plugs running well for 191k miles.
     
  3. May 10, 2018 at 10:43 AM
    #3
    BillsSR5

    BillsSR5 Looking out for #1

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    i noticed too that the DENSO plugs hold their gap better than NGKs,and are slightly less expensive
     
  4. May 10, 2018 at 11:31 AM
    #4
    Larueminati

    Larueminati Well-Known Member

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    That's just ludacris... They're like $4.00 each at the dealer.
     
  5. May 10, 2018 at 11:35 AM
    #5
    TacomaMike37

    TacomaMike37 Well-Known Member

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    He posts the same 2 things all the time:

    1) My Ford F350 this or that

    2) I never changed my plugs, yada yada
     
    Last edited: May 10, 2018
  6. May 10, 2018 at 11:36 AM
    #6
    ThunderOne

    ThunderOne Well-Known Member

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    many people go that long and more without even gapping.. it's surprising how long these plugs will last. 30K change intervals is what I would call, ambitious.
     
    scottalot and knottyrope like this.
  7. May 10, 2018 at 11:36 AM
    #7
    Pigpen

    Pigpen My truck is never clean

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    Access cab toolbox/ dog bed with seats and headrests deleted, waterproof TRD seat covers, yellow wire mod, diff breather relocated to tail light, engine block heater, Leer topper with Yakima tracks and rack, Yakima rack on cab, Ride Rite with Daystar cradles, CBI hidden front hitch, wired for winch front and rear Warn quick connect, Warn x8000i on external carrier, sway bar delete, trailer plug relocated to bumper, Pelfreybilt IFS and Mid skids, ECGS front diff bushing, ARB CKMA12 compressor, 255/85/16 Backcountrry MT 3 load E tires on stock steel rims, Up2NoGood heated mirror kit, Husky X-act Contour front floor liners, Northstar AGM 24F battery, Pelfreybilt bolt on sliders with kickout and top plates, TRD Pro headlights, Depo smoked tail lights, Energy suspension body mount bushing kit, OME Dakar leaf packs with AAL, Billstein B110 rear shocks, OME 90021 front shocks with 885 coils, SPC LR UCAs, Up2NoGood 2wd low range mod, 4 Wheel Campers Grandby slide in camper
    I swapped in NGK iridiums at 40K. I'm at 110K miles now. I'll look at a couple this summer to see if they need changed yet. I just finished a 2800 mile road trip. Truck runs great.
     
    kimo and scottalot like this.
  8. May 10, 2018 at 11:38 AM
    #8
    Pigpen

    Pigpen My truck is never clean

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    Access cab toolbox/ dog bed with seats and headrests deleted, waterproof TRD seat covers, yellow wire mod, diff breather relocated to tail light, engine block heater, Leer topper with Yakima tracks and rack, Yakima rack on cab, Ride Rite with Daystar cradles, CBI hidden front hitch, wired for winch front and rear Warn quick connect, Warn x8000i on external carrier, sway bar delete, trailer plug relocated to bumper, Pelfreybilt IFS and Mid skids, ECGS front diff bushing, ARB CKMA12 compressor, 255/85/16 Backcountrry MT 3 load E tires on stock steel rims, Up2NoGood heated mirror kit, Husky X-act Contour front floor liners, Northstar AGM 24F battery, Pelfreybilt bolt on sliders with kickout and top plates, TRD Pro headlights, Depo smoked tail lights, Energy suspension body mount bushing kit, OME Dakar leaf packs with AAL, Billstein B110 rear shocks, OME 90021 front shocks with 885 coils, SPC LR UCAs, Up2NoGood 2wd low range mod, 4 Wheel Campers Grandby slide in camper
    But that's how you burn up coil packs - and those cost more than spark plugs.
     
    MolonLabeTaco and taco2010trd like this.
  9. May 10, 2018 at 11:39 AM
    #9
    knottyrope

    knottyrope Well-Known Member

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    Pads, rotors, ujoints, 5900K Super White Xenon HID Halogen Bulb Fog Light

    Yay. I have a fan!
     
    cruxofthebisquit likes this.
  10. May 10, 2018 at 11:42 AM
    #10
    MadDaddy

    MadDaddy Pork Rind Extraordinaire

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    I need to do this tonight. Any tips?
     
  11. May 10, 2018 at 11:44 AM
    #11
    ThunderOne

    ThunderOne Well-Known Member

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    Even still, changing plugs every 30k... ambitious. Owners with no mechanical knowledge going 150k on stock plugs with no issues with coil packs. Anecdotal evidence, I confess. But still.
     
  12. May 10, 2018 at 11:44 AM
    #12
    knottyrope

    knottyrope Well-Known Member

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    Pads, rotors, ujoints, 5900K Super White Xenon HID Halogen Bulb Fog Light
    righty tighty, lefty loosey
     
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  13. May 10, 2018 at 12:11 PM
    #13
    Lucifer1

    Lucifer1 Well-Known Member

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    In my own experience, I replaced the spark plugs in my 07 2nd gen 4.0 at about 60,000 mi, there was no visible amount of high ware or big drop in MPG. I just wasn't convinced they would last 100,000 mi.
    with new Plugs I could feel better throttle response especially in stop and go traffic, a little quicker starts, cold, maby 1 or 2 MPG increase.
    In short I was happy with the results in the investment.
     
  14. May 10, 2018 at 12:28 PM
    #14
    knottyrope

    knottyrope Well-Known Member

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    that's how they suck you in, seem cheap now but I would have invested over 150 by now and gained what?
     
  15. May 10, 2018 at 12:49 PM
    #15
    Sharpish

    Sharpish Well-Known Member

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    I spend more than that on beer in a month. I guess it's peace of mind, in case the plug gets so heat fatigued the electrode/ground breaks off and gets jammed in your valvetrain, or it snaps in half and jams in the head when you're removing it, or it bonds with the aluminum cylinder head and removes the threads when you're taking it out ... stuff like that ... that costs a fortune to repair.

    Of course, if any of that happens to you, I doubt we will hear about it on TW ....
     
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  16. May 10, 2018 at 12:55 PM
    #16
    Blockhead

    Blockhead Well-Known Member

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    It takes you a month to spend $150 on beer? What a lightweight!! :benchpress:

    J/K :thumbsup:
     
  17. May 10, 2018 at 12:57 PM
    #17
    EatSleepTacos

    EatSleepTacos Well-Known Member

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    $150 over a decade isn't shit :rofl:That averages to $1.25 a month.
     
    blu92in99 and MadDaddy like this.
  18. May 10, 2018 at 1:05 PM
    #18
    Dane

    Dane Well-Known Member

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    Yes, NKG plugs wore more then Denso. I did notice same thing when I replaced my spark plugs first time few years back. Last weekend after 35k miles i changed plugs again. These were all denso that I purchased on dealership 3 years ago. They looked just fine. Almost same as new ones I put in. anyway i dont mind doing it every 3-4 years. New plugs I purchased a months ago while I was shopping some other parts. Just waited some free time to do it.
     
  19. May 10, 2018 at 1:21 PM
    #19
    Sharpish

    Sharpish Well-Known Member

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    Well that doesn't include my vodka and red wine budget :drunk:
     
  20. May 10, 2018 at 3:37 PM
    #20
    themanbearpig012

    themanbearpig012 Well-Known Member

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    Fox 2.5 Factory Series Coil-Over Reservoir (Front) Fox 2.0 Performance Series IFP (Rear) Method "Mesh" 17x8.5|6x5.50|0/4.75" wheels
    i'm at 49,911 on my 2015 and haven't swapped them yet. gone this long figured i'd wait till the 50k
     
    Chrome Beer likes this.

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