On the subject of spark plug gap: Back in the mid 1970s GM specified a spark plug gap of .060 on some of their engines equipped with the then new HEI electronic ignition system. The reasoning was improved performance, better combustion, reduced emissions etc. The HEI system was capable of delivering in excess of 50,000 volts in the secondary ignition system. The coil was indeed capable of firing the wide gap plugs, but the problem was that the spark would jump the path of least resistance, which wasn't always the plug gap. Spark would discharge right through the spark plug wires and boots to nearby manifold heat shields, and sometimes the intense voltage would discharge right through the distributor rotor to the distributor shaft; drilling a hole through it and shutting down the engine. Opening the hood at night with the engine running would often provide a light show of sparks from the plug wires. The fix was to reduce the gap to a more modest .045
Todays modern engines with coil on plug technology, and no ignition distributors, have fewer problematic components, and are more reliable.
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Papasonic