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From the Rolls-Royce experimental archive: a quarter of a million communications from Rolls-Royce, 1906 to 1960's. Documents from the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation (SHRMF).
Report comparing different types of American spark plugs, including A.C. Champion and Champion Toledo.

Identifier  ExFiles\Box 35\3\  scan 114
Date  22th May 1920 guessed
  
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of plugs in this country are the A.C. Champion plug made at Flint, Michigan, and the Champion Toledo Plug referred to above. I brought over samples of both these types, which I believe you probably have at Chichester.

There is no claim to any special design in these plugs except the fact of using a porcelain insulator of exceptionally high strength and resistance to change of temperature, with a large insulating surface inside the plug which gets hot enough to burn off accumulative carbon.

For Ford cars, the Flint Champion makes a plug having a special rib internal insulator, which is intended to get especially hot on the projecting ribs so as to burn off accumulative oil.

Mr. Caswell has used several thousands of the Toledo Metric Regular plugs and considers it to be one of the best plugs made in the United States.

So far as we have discovered, the other plugs available consist of trick designs of no special virtue.

Mr. Belnap, in his many years of motoring in this country and Canada, has always found that one of the two Champion Plugs give the best results. This in spite of the fact that they are quite cheap, being only one-third of the Herz and other similar plugs.

If Mr. Caswell's tests on the new Metric Regular prove satisfactory, we will send a large batch to Mr. Hives for test; and if not, will send the other two, namely, Flint and Toledo old type of plugs.

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