Hi all, sorry for being so long between posts. I have number of things to post on over the holidays and will take the time to do so.
I wanted to take the time to comment on the recent posts / pics of spark plug damage. There have been numerous pics of severely damaged plugs coming out of turbo motors with various suppositions attached regarding the possible causes of the damage.
First; Whenever there is physical damage to a spark plug, in the form of shattered porcelain insulators, melted or missing side electrodes, melted center electrodes etc. - it is not the fault of the spark plug - it is the result of archaic and grievously destructive conditions inside the cylinder.
(The one possible exception is if some foreign object has been ingested through the inlet tract)
Spark plugs, and their condition, are the "canary in the coal mine" of a cylinder's internal operating condition.
Before we had fancy dynos with wide band O2 sensors and engines equipped with exhaust gas temperature sensors - tuners and engine builders routinely assessed jetting and spark timing settings by "reading" the spark plugs. This is because the conditions (colorations, carbon deposits, microscopic metal particles on the center electrode) of the spark pug tip, are such a good indicator of exactly what is happening inside the motor during operation.
When you remove a plug from your engine and find gross physical damage to the plug - you have severe tuning issues involving fuel mixture and or timing of the spark. In either case there has most likely been severe detonation (pre ignition) going on and very likely damage to the piston, rings, cylinder walls etc. even if the damage is not readily apparent.
The causes are generally a combination of excessive spark advance and an overly lean fuel mixture. It is true however that either excessive timing or lean mixtures, by themselves, can cause the same type of damage to the plug. It is very important to note that both of these are measured against the quality of the fuel being used at the time of the damage. A "tune up" that would be quite acceptable for race gas, with no damage to plugs or engine, could cause a complete melt down on pump gas, as could a 93 octane tune if say 89 octane was used and the car was run hard. (Fuel quality and consistency in this country is generally terrible and highly variable from state to state and pump to pump).
When you see a plug with electrodes that look like the tip of a used welding rod - you have BIG tune up problems with your ECU, or, you have severe fuel delivery issues that are causing the engine to go lean under boost when mixtures need to be at their richest! It is never the fault of the spark plug.
I run just basic triple electrode Bosch copper core plugs in the Bonneville Land Speed engine and they come out looking just like new with a light tan coloration on the porcelain insulator - nothing special just plain old 2 dollars plugs - in a 1000 HP 10,000 rpm motor. BUT this is on high quality racing fuel with more than adequate fuel delivery capacity and a conservative (for race fuel) fuel air ratio of 12.5 to 1 under load.
The last point I would like to make is that every driver won't always hear obvious overt knocking or pinging in you engine under every condition that can cause spark plug / engine damage - sometimes it can be quite insidious and that is why you need good monitoring instruments on your car. At a minimum you should have a quality wide band sensor and gage to insure you are staying in a safe A/F range relative to the quality and octane rating of the fuel in use. With any pump gas you don't want to run leaner than about 11.5 to 1 at full boost. (And even this level assumes a proper pump gas spark table in the ECU) With the wide band running you will know if something in the fuel delivery system changes that adversely affects the tune up - before you pull a melted plug from the motor!