I went ahead and ordered 4 of the Autolite Iridium XP Plugs - I had been using copper plugs, but had been having a pronounced flat spot when accelerating from low RPM. This could be due to a few different things, but I figured that if I was going to end up toiling under the hood to diagnose the problem, I might as well change out the plugs while I am at it.
So "kids," :lol1: here's a mechanic-type dilema for you :
A 4 cylinder YJ owner has an accel coil (supposedly 'hotter'), accel 8mm wires, and now, Autolite's Iridium plugs (factory preset gap at .35). The Iridium plugs, with there smaller electrode, are supposed to provide 20% less electrical resistance and require 5000 fewer volts to fire. So here's the question for you: "what gap should I run these Iridium plugs at?"
a) .35 - factory spec?
b) .42 - 20% greater than factory spec to account for the lower electrical resistance of the plugs
c) greater than .42 to account for the lower plug resistance + the higher performing coil/wires (but, don't think my coil and wires are on par with the FireWire ignition setup)?
Note: I had been searching under Iridium plugs and was led to a site for Hondas. These guys with factory-preset Iridium plugs (NGK, Denso) gap them wider than the factory preset, seemingly because they believe the lower electrical resistance allowed by Iridium plugs enables a wider gap to be used. Apparently, they seem to feel that this helps, peformance-wise. Some of them speculate that the factory preset (ie, "owner not supposed to widen the gap on the platinum or iridium plugs") is done in an effort to prevent owners from scraping off the exotic metals - platinum, iridium - thus reducing the lifespan of the plug. Course, the Honda guys show how to use a narrow tool covered in tape to widen the gap between electrodes and prevent damage when gapping the more exotic plugs.