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ernman said:I have a 2004 Outback, and it is time to change the plugs. I did a quick search and the price ranges from $3.00 to $10.00. What would I gain with the $10.00 plugs?
Gears said:On the new Subarus the Turbos get Iridium and the regular engines call for Platinum.
longdx said:Agreed that many "performance" claims of many plugs are just hype. I would recommend using the factory replacement plugs suitable for your application. A good rule of thumb, is to use Japanese specific plugs for imports, and American (Autolight, Motorcraft, etc) for domestics. Remember, Iridium helps in preventing corrosion at the tip and extends usable life of the plug (over 35k normal driving) whereas copper will corrode quicker but will still last @30k mileage.
I made the mistake of putting NKG iridium plugs in a domestic application , and the vehicle experienced driveability problems and threw some codes. Replaced with autolights (cheap factory OEM replacements) and all the problems went away.
KnuckleBuckett said:I used to work in a facility that tested plugs for durability and performance. Bosch and NGK were always standouts.
spike_africa said:Like he said dont waste your money on the hype a plug isnt going to make you faster. I run cheap NGK's in my sprayed mustang.
Setec Astronomy said:How long ago was this? I find the chain-store Bosch to be junk (although I haven't used them in a long time because of a bad experience). Sometimes you get what you pay for...when Bosch first came out with "platinum" plugs they were selling them at pretty much the same price as a junk plug ($1 ea.)...but I said to myself "they can't be junk; they're platinum"...I was wrong...they were junk.
KnuckleBuckett said:Been a while. So, taking your experience into advisement, I called a buddy that remained at those labs. According to what he said, price and value have little correlation.