Been reading about the superplugs. Buddy of mine said he had talked to Geno's; they had heard of 3 instances of drain plugs falling out and catastrophic engine failure. I immediately pulled mine after changing my oil only 300 miles ago. The plug did not feel tight. I think part of the problem with the super plug is that the hex head is much smaller diameter than the original plug, and the smaller diameter of the bearing area doesn't provide as much resistance to the plug/gasket rotating loose compared to the stock plug, which has a shoulder that encompasses the full diamter of the gasket. I could definitely see the marks left by the points of the hexes on the bolt head on the metal gasket well inside of the outer diameter of the washer.
Anyway, my question is... is it really worth having a magnetic plug in an engine anyway? As I understand the routing of oil through the engine, it's picked up from the pan/reservoir by the oil pickup, goes through the pump and through the filter before being distributed to the oil galleys and ultimatley to the engine bearing surfaces. In order for metal flakes to get to the bearing surfaces and cause damage, the metal particles would have to be smaller than the oil filter pores. Any metal generated by the engine during operation occurs during the oil's path through the engine, as a result of normal wear. And I think wear products from the bearings - rod, crankshaft, etc - are non-magnetic or weakly magnetic materials, and wouldn't be picked up by the magnet anyway. When the oil is changed, most (hopefully) of the metal particles will be washed out of the pan.
Does anybody know if the filter will take out the metal particles of the size range that would be picked up by the drain plug? Finer particles that are not filterable would probably stay in suspension unless they came in close contact with the drain plug. Does anbody know of solid evidence/studies regarding mag plug effectiveness at preventing premature engine failure/wear?
IMHO having an aftermarket plug is way too risky for the potential benefit. Mag plugs definitely make sense for the transfer case, tranmission, and differentials since there is no filtration to take the metal particles out of the oil and the plugs can be torqued harder agains the more solid metal casings.
Anyway, my question is... is it really worth having a magnetic plug in an engine anyway? As I understand the routing of oil through the engine, it's picked up from the pan/reservoir by the oil pickup, goes through the pump and through the filter before being distributed to the oil galleys and ultimatley to the engine bearing surfaces. In order for metal flakes to get to the bearing surfaces and cause damage, the metal particles would have to be smaller than the oil filter pores. Any metal generated by the engine during operation occurs during the oil's path through the engine, as a result of normal wear. And I think wear products from the bearings - rod, crankshaft, etc - are non-magnetic or weakly magnetic materials, and wouldn't be picked up by the magnet anyway. When the oil is changed, most (hopefully) of the metal particles will be washed out of the pan.
Does anybody know if the filter will take out the metal particles of the size range that would be picked up by the drain plug? Finer particles that are not filterable would probably stay in suspension unless they came in close contact with the drain plug. Does anbody know of solid evidence/studies regarding mag plug effectiveness at preventing premature engine failure/wear?
IMHO having an aftermarket plug is way too risky for the potential benefit. Mag plugs definitely make sense for the transfer case, tranmission, and differentials since there is no filtration to take the metal particles out of the oil and the plugs can be torqued harder agains the more solid metal casings.
