Mike6 said:high blood pressure, dodgy kidneys( to much time in Wetherspoons) and poor back (think thats all)
Errrr :rofl:
This is a spark plug change thread, not oil :rofl:
Mike6 said:high blood pressure, dodgy kidneys( to much time in Wetherspoons) and poor back (think thats all)
What about the times for the plugs on the m54 2.2 engines please and are they as difficult to remove as I would really like to give it a go myself.B21 said:The spark plug life is driven (pun) by various factors…
General rule of thumb for stock cars is around 25k for N54s and 35k for N52s and 40-50k for N20s
Re-mapped cars divide by 2…
Of course since the DMEs try to correct faults dynamically you won’t be aware there’s an issue till they start misfiring…
Easiest job on the N52 engine alternator belt change, can do in 1 minute.Mike6 said:When I skimmed this thread I am sure someone was talking about oil changes as well, if not apologies. Cannot see any difficulty in changing spark plugs. , probably one of the easiest of jobs on a car.
B21 said:The spark plug life is driven (pun) by various factors…
General rule of thumb for stock cars is around 25k for N54s and 35k for N52s and 40-50k for N20s
Re-mapped cars divide by 2…
Of course since the DMEs try to correct faults dynamically you won’t be aware there’s an issue till they start misfiring…
Silverstar said:B21 said:The spark plug life is driven (pun) by various factors…
General rule of thumb for stock cars is around 25k for N54s and 35k for N52s and 40-50k for N20s
Re-mapped cars divide by 2…
Of course since the DMEs try to correct faults dynamically you won’t be aware there’s an issue till they start misfiring…
I thought the N52 were around every 60,000 miles? Although I did mine when I got the car at around half that mileage.
B21 said:Silverstar said:B21 said:The spark plug life is driven (pun) by various factors…
General rule of thumb for stock cars is around 25k for N54s and 35k for N52s and 40-50k for N20s
Re-mapped cars divide by 2…
Of course since the DMEs try to correct faults dynamically you won’t be aware there’s an issue till they start misfiring…
I thought the N52 were around every 60,000 miles? Although I did mine when I got the car at around half that mileage.
Here are some other views..my primary issue or focus was re-mapped ones..
In most modern BMWs, manufactured after 2010 with the N20 or N55 engines, it is required to change spark plugs every 60,000 miles. For BMWs with V8, V10, or N54 or N63 engines, 37000 miles are the threshold before getting new spark plugs. As for BMW models between 1999 to 2009, spark plugs are replaced at 80,000 miles due to their platinum and iridium tipped plugs.
or
BMW with Platinum or Iridium spark plugs
100,000-mile interval
Example N52 motor
BMW with Two Ground Spark Plugs
60,000-mile interval
Example: N36 E37 E85 E46 M3 M Roadster
BMW M Series Spark Plug Interval
35,000-mile interval
E60 M5 E63 E64 M6 E90 E92 M3
BMW with Cooper Spark Plug Change Interval
40,000-mile interval
Example: 135i 335i 335i Engine N54, N63
MikeyH said:Are the coils supposed to be replaced at the same time as the plugs?
Thank you b21B21 said:MikeyH said:Are the coils supposed to be replaced at the same time as the plugs?
Generally no…broadly there’s a 3:1 through 2:1 range of plugs for coils..it’s an in exact science..again premium coil suppliers products tend to last longer, as do their plugs..
Eldor / NGK / Bosch tier 1 in this domain![]()
Again on highly tuned cars 2:1 is not uncommon ratio for plugs n coils..N54s are known to get through coils in 20k when seriously tuned..
Coils and plugs are not related, though, surely?B21 said:My own 35is was OK till I remapped it then coil no 6 failed as we passed 385 bhp
On my N20 E89 Coil no 4 gave way as we went past 280bhp
Pondrew said:From circa 2014 onward cars, BMW specify 'every other service' for plugs, irrespective of mileage (so I read somewhere). Absolute bollox IMHO. Plugs don't suffer from 'old age'. If they ain't being used, they ain't wearing out or getting carbon build up (the real problem with spark erosion).
If you're doing 15k miles a year, then every 4 years makes sense, but if you're doing 1.5k a year then it doesn't. Unfortunately for them manufacturers can't put a 'service indicator' on a spark plug, so came up with a generalisation IMHO.
Yes because they haven't worked out how to count down a spark plug in the 'puter!Mr Tidy said:My 2005 3 Series shows a mileage for the plugs with no date, unlike the oil service and Inspection "countdowns" that show both.
B21 said:The reason why coil / plug / state of tune are in part to design and combustion pressures..
As you say age in isolation is no predictor of the demise of plugs…duty cycle is..
Turbos have higher internal combustion pressures than NA engines..that’s why they make more power at the same displacement…
The spark has to be strong enough to ignite the mixture
Higher pressures require a stronger spark to ignite / manage the burn
The strain of trying to fire the mixture causes premature wear and stress on all the components
In the case of the N54 the engine tends to run hot and cook the coils
As the tune goes up the coils either have to have more power or the plug gap needs to be narrowed otherwise the pressure in the cylinder will be so high as to stop a spark forming correctly and then you get the misfire..
Many N54 engines have racked up big mileages and or have been tuned ..often to 600/700 BHP levels
It’s accumulated experience that shows the coil / plug / gap relationship and their associated wear / failure rates..