Post by
4WOFURY »
https://forums.nicoclub.com/4wofury-u89599.html
Mon Aug 31, 2009 11:51 pm
This is all purely based on personal opinion and thought into the subject... with a couple facts thrown in there.
Fact: Electricity takes the path of least resistance. Unless you are buying some extreme custom, individually labratory tested, super plugs (that cost $100+ a plug), the prongs are going to have some sort of dis-similarity. Therefore, electricity will go down the one that is the least resistant, every time, all the time.
The prongs don't act as back ups. They all expand at the same rate from explosion in the combustion chamber. They all get deposits, the unused ones probably more so.
And those extra prongs? They're slowing down the explosion. Think of a house. A fire starts on one end of the house. To get to the other side quickly, it has to go around walls (until it burns them down of course, but that's not the point here). Now if you take down those walls, and just have a fire going from one end to the other, unobstructed. It's going to be able to burn much more quickly.
Now that we're talking about obstructions, I've been thinking.. With the top of the spark being blocked off by the prong, it is an obstruction too (in engines where the spark plug goes into the center of the combustion chamber).
- If you had the spark travel sideways, then would that provide a less obstructed path?-Someone else already thought of this with e3 spark plugs you see in parts stores, that have a V shaped prong.