All things being equal how does spark gap affect detonation?
Really, the spark plug gap should not make any difference.
If it is an older / stock engine, make sure the valve stem seals are good. Oil in the combustion chamber can cause pinging (like really low octane fuel.)
Lowering air intake temperature also helps. using an intake gasket that blocks the heat crossover is a good place to start when reducing air intake temps (AIT)
Predetonation is just that: spontaneous combustion prior to the proper ignition point in the cycle.
The plug hasn't fired yet.
The piston is still coming up and bam!
IMO...
YES...that supposition is correct. There are basically two types of spontaneous combustion: (1) pre-ignition is where the fuel charge is ignited by glowing carbon deposits. (2) Detonation is caused by the fuel charge igniting by the compression cycle AND the flame front ignited by the spark plug. When the two flame fronts collide, the resulting collision causes the noise and shock loads the piston, sometimes to the point of catastrophic component failure. Detonation is usually caused by a low octane fuel charge, too much spark advance (or too great of a rate of advance), too hot of an engine, and a lean fuel mixture, too high compression ratio, or some combination of all the above. Most every one says they hear the valves "rattling"....not true..at the instant of combustion, both valves are closed.
GM adopted the HEI ignition system in 1975 with the advent of the catalytic converter. To reduce rmissions, leaner mixtures were used, which required larger spark plug gaps to ignite the fuel charge. The standard 0.035" gap became 0.045" to 0.060" and Oldsmobile used 0.080". The HEI system was up tp the task. A few years later Exhaust Gas Recirculation was added to furthur reduce NOx emissions and the use of wide gap plugs continued.
There are various types of spark plug gap configurations, from projected nose plugs, to Champion's "J" gap to side gap plugs used in race car engines and blown dragster engines using nitro methane methanol fuels. When applied to the engine and operating conditions correctly the spark plugs have no difficulty igniting the fuel charge.
Champion Spark Plug Company had published very definitive information about the science of automotive ignition systems, what occurs, for just sbout every internal combustion engine made including race cars to chain saws to industrial applications. NGK has similar information available today.
To simply state one system is better than any other system is incorrect....it needs to be correctly applied.
BOB RENTON
Thanks for the replies guys. All things being equal was to try and examine just the effect of spark gap and detonation.
We know that a wider gap will be able to burn a leaner mixture. Does that mean it ignites sooner than a narrower gaped plug? IMO....NO when the spark occurs is the determining factor not the gap width.
Bob Renton in your comments you mentioned the two flame fronts colliding causing the vibration and subsequent issues with detonation. If the gap changes the timing of that flame front then the timing of the collision changes. I am wondering about that timing event change here.
Gotcha no time relation with respect to gap. So how does a colder plug prevent detonation all things being equal again?You cannot assume timing variation relates to gap width. Once the burn starts, it goes to completion. IF the fuel charge cannot supress the increase in pressure change due to progressing flame front, the mixture will auto ignite, like a diesel engine, and detonation will occur. Ionization will occur around the center electrode, prior to the actual spark occurrence, which allows the actual spark to jump the gap to the ground electrode. All these events occur within milli-seconds. The voltage level, not the gap dimension, is the greatest influence. Wider gaps allow for greater exposure to the fuel charge; the higher voltage allows the spark to occur with longer discharge time. This is due to the coil's inductive reactance in the GM's HEI system. Mopar's original orange box ignition system was simply a points system replacement. The distributor just stitched the coil current. The coil used did not produce the same energy level (voltage) as the HEI coil did. Chrysler did not use wide gap plugs, at least innitially. Detonation is related more to fuel's octane level and spark advance characteristics not spark gap.
BOB RENTON
Gotcha no time relation with respect to gap. So how does a colder plug prevent detonation all things being equal again?
So a colder plug doesn’t necessarily prevent detonation or preignition but too hot of a plug will cause one or the other. Makes sense.Thanks!Not really....the heat range of the spark plug relates to the plugs ability to transfer the heat generated in the combustion chamber at the center electrode to the cooling system via the plug's insulator and shell. A hot plug has a longer center insulator, allowing the heat generated to travel farther, b4 bring absorbed by the cooling system. Conversely, a colder plug has a shorter insulator which absorbs heat faster allowing the center electrode to operate cooler.
IF a higher heat range (hotter plug) is used in an engine designed to operate with a cooler plug (low heat range), two things MAY occur. The center electrode would melt or the piston top may be damaged or possibly both. A hot plug may inniate pre-ignition or more likely detonation. While a cold running plug will NOT prevent detonation. A cold plug will, in all likelihood, become fouled resulting in a mis-fire resulting in a lack of power.
Not all spark plug manufacturers use the same heat range scale or criteria....Champion differs from NGK from Bosch, from AC, from Autolite or E3. You must do your own do dilligance for what ever brand you select to see where your choice of plug falls within the manufacturers heat range scale for your operating condition and engine. Under certain conditions (in a 1/4 mile contest with open headders) you will be hard pressed to actually hear the detonation, should it be occuring.
BOB RENTON
there specification for gap and in testing for spark to much gap and the system can be damaged . that is in the manual for testing high energy system. some ignitions systems wont jump a gap to large it would jump to the shortest i.e ez'ist ground .
Thanks for the replies guys. All things being equal was to try and examine just the effect of spark gap and detonation.
We know that a wider gap will be able to burn a leaner mixture. Does that mean it ignites sooner than a narrower gaped plug?
Bob Renton in your comments you mentioned the two flame fronts colliding causing the vibration and subsequent issues with detonation. If the gap changes the timing of that flame front then the timing of the collision changes. I am wondering about that timing event change here.