i may have the more pricey types i will have to check but i am pushing them way past 60k now almost 77k on them. i sense no issues yet, going to get them replaced in DecemberI change the cheapie's at 30k miles. Different deal with the more expensive iridium type in these newer trucks...manual says to replace them at 60k miles.
Only thing i could think of for these higher cost iridium plugs is they might be some sort of a dual heat range plug that needs to be compatible with these engines, otherwise I'm with you.FWIW. I'm not convinced these need the high $$ iridium plugs. The Owner's Manual will have specs on the needed plugs.
The basic copper based Denso at about $5/ea every 30K is pretty cheap. Shoot, a single oil change is more expensive. I do oil change every 5K, the spend is 6X the spend on plugs.. Plugs cost $0.001/mile.
A spark from any plug will ignite the fuel/air mix in the cylinder. Extra power/performance doesn't come from the plug.
Buy the cheap ones and change on the interval. You won't go wrong and probably save $$ in the long haul.
The ones my snowmobile uses are a dual heat range type. They do have a copper core.Sorry. The heat range is determined by the insulator material and the length.
Not sure if a plug can be made to handle multiple heat ranges.
The advantage is supposedly.....longer life. Although, if you run the $/mile....the answer may discredit the claims.
can you believe i have 25.5 years on this rig and NO codes ever triggeredProbably if they foul causing an o2 sensor to send one.
Why did you need coils at such a young mileage?I did my 3rd gen after 100,000 miles with stock Toyota plugs AND stock Toyota coils.
I stuck black electrical tape over my engine check light when the cats failed in the tundra. Got sick of seeing that yellow/orange dash led staring me in the face every time i drove that truck.can you believe i have 25.5 years on this rig and NO codes ever triggered
maybe that CEL light is burnt LOL
I was already going to be removing them to get to the plugs + they are done for another 100,000 milesWhy did you need coils at such a young mileage?
I looked at price of new OEM coilsI was already going to be removing them to get to the plugs + they are done for another 100,000 miles