Originally Posted by
Jack B
I installed the Moroso wires last night. I had noticed near the end of last year the engine had picked up an irregular idle, it was hardly noticeable and did not seem to affect anything else. The PCM still maintained the idle, but, you could tell it was working harder to keep the programmed rpm. Again, unless you had the hood open (watching the engine movement) and paid close attention, the anomaly is easy to miss.
After installing the Moroso wires, the idle instability stopped. At this point I do not know much more about the new wires.except the issue is solved. The marketing brochures are kind of evasive (the same for Magnecore). They like to talk about the low resistance, but, that is not the whole story, with a fast rising waveform (like the spark initiation) it is not all about wire resistance, you also have to consider inductance. To measure that you would need an oscilloscope attached to the plug wire during the spark event.
To make a long story short, it appears the high end plug wires do not use the resistor wire approach, they use a combination of inductance and RFI/EMI cancelling techniques to protect the car's electronic communications pathways. The shielding/cancelling of RFI/EMI is probably the most important function of a plug wire in today's cars, the second function being a reliable spark path. The oem plug wires are the resistor approach, that method has always been prone to longevity issues especially with high heat.
This thread started when I saw Alex's post about his issues with his plug wires. The next question is, how many more cars (right now two) have these almost undetectable, but, critical issues. The signs (in my case) come at the low end, however, what is happening to power at WOT. In my case, the Arrow Stage II reflash turns off misfire detection, therefore, the issue becomes virtually undetectable.
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