Rover V8 Twin Turbo spark plugs??
Rover V8 Twin Turbo spark plugs??
Author
Discussion

neal1980

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

263 months

Friday 12th November 2010
quotequote all

Hi,

Im nearing the end of my Twin Turbo Rover V8 Install and need some spark plugs.

I know a few of you have Rover V8 Turbos before :-)

As its turbo now Im guessing I need some colder plugs??

What plugs do you recommend I use??

regards

Neal

stevieturbo

17,986 posts

271 months

Friday 12th November 2010
quotequote all
Some RV8's use very cold plugs anyway. Just use a decent NGK 6 or 7 heat range and it will be fine.

neal1980

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

263 months

Friday 12th November 2010
quotequote all
Thanks Steve

Boosted LS1

21,200 posts

284 months

Friday 12th November 2010
quotequote all
I used to use projected nose NGK 7's. BP7 something or other iirc.

Fire99

9,865 posts

253 months

Saturday 13th November 2010
quotequote all
neal1980 said:
Hi,

Im nearing the end of my Twin Turbo Rover V8 Install and need some spark plugs.

I know a few of you have Rover V8 Turbos before :-)

As its turbo now Im guessing I need some colder plugs??

What plugs do you recommend I use??

regards

Neal
Hi Neal,

Is this install in your Chimaera? Since I have one too biggrin , i'd be very interested in info on how your install has gone.

neal1980

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

263 months

Saturday 13th November 2010
quotequote all
Fire99 said:
neal1980 said:
Hi,

Im nearing the end of my Twin Turbo Rover V8 Install and need some spark plugs.

I know a few of you have Rover V8 Turbos before :-)

As its turbo now Im guessing I need some colder plugs??

What plugs do you recommend I use??

regards

Neal
Hi Neal,

Is this install in your Chimaera? Since I have one too biggrin , i'd be very interested in info on how your install has gone.
Its been quite slow to be honest but had many other house projects on the go. But throwing every minute at it now. Hope to fire it up before christmas.

Cant write much im using the kitchen / oven as a spray bake whilst the missus is out biglaugh










Fire99

9,865 posts

253 months

Saturday 13th November 2010
quotequote all
neal1980 said:
'pics that may get him shot by the missus!! biggrin '
Cracking effort mate. Can we all come to your funeral if the wife finds out? biggrin

macdeb

8,733 posts

279 months

Sunday 14th November 2010
quotequote all
Cool. hehe

Steve_D

13,801 posts

282 months

Sunday 14th November 2010
quotequote all
Fire99 said:
neal1980 said:
'pics that may get him shot by the missus!! biggrin '
Cracking effort mate. Can we all come to your funeral if the wife finds out? biggrin
What a way to go. Beaten to death with a (clean) inlet plenum.

Steve

dbv8

8,675 posts

244 months

Tuesday 16th November 2010
quotequote all
Grade 7 NGKs are the norm for a standard NA TVR with 'normal' CR.
I guess it depends on how much boost you intend to run but i would try grade 8's.
I fitted grade 8's to mine to run 150 bhp of nitrous and found the car ran fine on these plugs the rest of the time off gas.
I am going to try grade 9's for heavy gas use in future

neal1980

Original Poster:

2,584 posts

263 months

Tuesday 16th November 2010
quotequote all
dbv8 said:
Grade 7 NGKs are the norm for a standard NA TVR with 'normal' CR.
I guess it depends on how much boost you intend to run but i would try grade 8's.
I fitted grade 8's to mine to run 150 bhp of nitrous and found the car ran fine on these plugs the rest of the time off gas.
I am going to try grade 9's for heavy gas use in future
I thought the grade was the other way around but have no clue on sparkplugs hence the question..

So the higher the number the colder the range??

You got a part number for the 8's or do you just replace the 7 for an eight??

regards

Neal

dbv8

8,675 posts

244 months

Tuesday 16th November 2010
quotequote all
neal1980 said:
dbv8 said:
Grade 7 NGKs are the norm for a standard NA TVR with 'normal' CR.
I guess it depends on how much boost you intend to run but i would try grade 8's.
I fitted grade 8's to mine to run 150 bhp of nitrous and found the car ran fine on these plugs the rest of the time off gas.
I am going to try grade 9's for heavy gas use in future
I thought the grade was the other way around but have no clue on sparkplugs hence the question..

So the higher the number the colder the range??

You got a part number for the 8's or do you just replace the 7 for an eight??

regards

Neal
NGKs, the higher the number the colder. It can be the other way round on other plugs such as chumpionsn etc.
Use the same spec just change the number.
IIRC BP8ES ??? need to check

Pupp

12,903 posts

296 months

Tuesday 16th November 2010
quotequote all
BR8ECS

It's a colder resistive version of the TVR recommended plug, including with the stronger ground electrode that is better able to withstand any ping or det.

If non-resitive is preferred, lose the R