I got them off EBay and yes, they did slide right over. I ordered for an old Hemi
Hi Jack, I don't think I received a message from you? How did you send? If you sent here, I haven't gotten any notifications of messages that I have seen. I apologize! Feel free if you need to reach out to me at www.qualitywires.com
Hi, I don't think I received a message or call? How did you contact? Let me know if you need anything. I can be reached at www.qulaitywires.com or 502-419-0133 directly. I apologize for not seeing the message.
The wire set has a limited lifetime warranty and never got any calls or messages about issues from Canada. If you are in contact with them let them know the wires are backed up and I would be more than happy to look into their issues if they are causing any issues. We sell thousands of sets and each one is handmade and tested before they go out. Let me know how I can help them but please have them contact me. www.qualitywires.com or 502-419-0133 direct. Looking forward to hearing from them.
Good Thread Jack...
Wires degrade with age-heat-miles as do all other under-hood soft components. Our torquey V-10s with heavy flywheels DISGUISE minor ignition faults. Many owners attribute any rough-idle situations to cam or OE idle program. If you have a 4 cyl or 6-cyl turbo, you would NOTICE ! Not so with 8+L V-10. Over time, we become blind to minor accel losses unless being timed at the strip.
Many owners only discover they were LOSING HP after they routinely replace plugs and wires! Its a real tune-up surprise.
Hint: Dont asphyxiate yourself, but:
This works best on a warmed motor - If you can start your hood-open Viper in a bat-cave totally-dark-garage setting, and your eyes have acclimated, you can even SEE 'spiderweb' blue-ish arcing of degraded wires at plug or coil ends. Extra-fine-filament webs sparking like an old-time-sci-fi movie. YOU NEED WIRES.
There are also hand-held wire testers to check the same thing, and wont make your garage stinky.
Anecdote: Back in 1999 we had a before-after dyno contest at a midwest club. Guys did mods after a baseline dyno. One guy was SOO EXCITED because the only mod he did was Belanger Headers /Cats/Catback/KNs, and he gained +68HP! The very most you would predict or expect on a 1998 was +50 HP
But as recommended, he had also replaced OE wires and plugs with header install. This undoubtedly accounted for the missing / recovered HP simply due to ignition losses. There are NUMEROUS surprise anecdotes of brisk, crisp, smoother accel simply due to new OE plugs, and wires. [wire brand no matter...just NEW]
15-20K miles or 5-7+ years are the normal life of OE wires. Less if tracked frequently or with headers.
Last edited by JonB ~ PartsRack; 07-16-2019 at 01:56 PM.
What JonB said. Just replaced mine after my 04 started missing very noticeably when stepping on the loud pedal. Runs properly now...like a scalded cat.
[QUOTE=JonB ~ PartsRack;387526]Good Thread Jack...
Wires degrade with age-heat-miles as do all other under-hood soft components......
Just did mine the other day...had them gapped wrong...fixed the gap, now the thing runs like a new car.
I have been under the impression that spark plugs in today's cars will last 100,000 miles or so. If this is incorrect, how often should plugs be changed? With the exception of a supercharged Gen 3 I used to own I have never changed plugs in a Viper. The only reason I changed them in the supercharged Gen 3 was to move to a cooler heat range on Dan Cragin's recommendation.
Anyone know the service manual recommended maintenance interval for the wires?
Last edited by JonB ~ PartsRack; 07-17-2019 at 02:14 PM.
I need some new plug wires! I've been getting a random cylinder misfire code lately (P0300) Car runs great everywhere but 1600-2k rpms as there is a slight hesitation. Just put in some new Champion RC12ECC plugs. Stock besides headers, high flow cats and Corsa exhaust. Currently running some MSD wires. Don't know how old they are as the previous owner had them installed
I know that from years of changing plugs on my car that I have always heard a hotter plug makes your car run better. Copper has always been better for this but the offset is that you have to change them out more often. I have always had good luck with NGK and when it comes to O2 sensors, Nippon Denso makes about the best. I have always used MSD for my wires. We all have our favorites when it comes to plugs, wires, and O2 sensors just like oil brands.
I have always lived by the rule that a lower resistance means more spark to the plug and better combustion. As someone stated earlier, get in a darkened environment and open your hood and look for sparks. If you see the sparks or spiderweb looking flashes then you are seeing plug wire leakage so to speak.
I'm using Magnecor R-100 10mm Racing wires.
Don't forget insulation/thermal socks. Cheap insurance against burn/heat degradation.
https://www.magnecor.com/magnecor1/main.htm
Bookmarks