by bgsengine » Mon Aug 13, 2018 6:56 pm
ever try a de-construction of one of the bad plugs to see why it loses spark? Most of the times when I find a non-fouled plug that won't fire, the insulator is cracked, and that can happen in shipping if they are loose packed, can also happen if plug gets over-torqued (owner doing maintenance with a cordless wrench or driver?) or experiences a shock load (being dropped on the plug boot? - getting banged around in the back of a pickup truck?) - Ive seen all 3 types of failures , grind the crimp off the hex body to pull the insulator out, chances are good it comes out in 2 pieces.. that many failures does not seem like a consistent plug problem but a mechanical issue, one which could be happening to any plug (might even have been why the original plugs failed too?) I'd be curious if you get your hands on some original bosch plugs if they don't continue to experience the same issues..
edit to add - Also the info I posted earlier, comes out of NGK 2018 catalog, and while I would not call it authoritative as far as plug gaps (it doesnt even list a HS56 Stihl model) , I have found that sometimes even the factory manual is wrong (typo in specs?) but .020 does sound about right for current production models.. I would tend to assume they reduced gap to deal with leaner fuel mixtures...
How poor are they who have not patience. What wound did ever heal, but by degrees? - Iago (Othello Act II, Scene 3)