The spark plug gap, for your 2000 Subaru 2.5 liter engine, is .007. Most spark plugs will be pre-gapped by the spark plug manufacturer.
For the non-turbo charged engine the specified spark plug gap is .039 to .043 inches.
.28 to .31
The spark plug gap for a 2007 Subaru Outback Touring Edition should be set at 1.016 mm. This is equal to .040 inches. A new spark plug will come pregapped and does not need to be adjusted any further.
No there is not.
I would imagine that you are referring to a high voltage electrical distributor on the engine rather than an automobile distributor. Your Outback doesn't use one. Look under the hood and locate the spark plug wires. Trace any of them back away from the spark plugs and you will see that they plug directly into the coil on top and near the front of the engine.
gaps on all plugs should be .039-.043 inches
That would depend on which engine you have in your 2003 Ford Excursion : The 7.3 liter diesel engine doesn't use any spark plugs The 5.4 liter V8 engine has ( 8 spark plugs ) The 6.8 liter V10 engine has ( 10 spark plugs )
On a Ford Excursion ( if it has a gasoline engine ) ( the 5.4 liter V8 engine has 8 spark plugs ) ( the 6.8 liter V10 engine has 10 spark plugs )
That depends if you have a gasoline engine On a 2003 Ford F-250 if you have the 5.4 liter gasoline V8 engine it has ( 8 spark plugs ) If you have the 6.8 liter gasoline V10 engine it has ( 10 spark plugs ) If you have the 7.3 liter DIESEL engine it doesn't have any spark plugs
The spark plug gap for a 1998 Subaru Impreza/Legacy with the 2.5L DOHC engine is .044".
( .050 inch ) - spark plug gap for 1986 Ford Mustang - 5.0 liter engine
spark plug loacation on 2006 jeep wrangler sport 4.0 liter engine