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Spark plug wires, also called high-tension leads, carry the ignition coil's high-voltage pulse to each spark plug — a clean, strong signal means complete combustion; a degraded one means misfires, rough idle, and lost fuel economy. Most conventional spark plug wire sets are due for replacement every 30,000–60,000 miles, though silicone-jacketed sets on low-mileage vehicles can stretch further. Heat, oil contamination, and repeated heat cycling crack the insulation and increase resistance over time. The bulk of this catalog is spark plug wire sets (1,300+ SKUs), but you'll also find distributor cap/wire combos, wire holders and separators, crankshaft position sensor adapter wires, coil assembly wiring harnesses, and spark plug connectors. When buying, match wire diameter and boot configuration to your engine — 7mm, 8mm, and 8.5mm are common sizes — and verify the terminal type (straight, 90°, or coil-on-plug adapter). OEM-spec sets use suppression-core wire to prevent RFI interference with sensors and electronics; budget aftermarket sets sometimes skip this.
Signs you need replacement
- Misfires or rough idle at operating temperature. A wire with cracked insulation or a loose terminal causes intermittent spark, which shows up as a stumble or shudder — often worse under load or in damp weather when arcing increases.
- Check Engine light with P030X misfire codes. Codes P0301–P0308 point to cylinder-specific misfires; swapping wires between cylinders and seeing whether the code follows the wire is a quick way to confirm a bad lead.
- Visible cracks, scorch marks, or oil soaking on the wire jacket. Wires routed too close to exhaust manifolds or valve covers degrade faster — any physical damage warrants immediate replacement before the insulation fails completely.
- Hard starting or extended cranking, especially when cold. High-resistance wires reduce spark energy most noticeably when the engine is cold and fuel mixture is richest, making this a classic early symptom.
- Noticeable drop in fuel economy without another clear cause. Incomplete combustion from weak spark forces the ECU to compensate, increasing injector pulse width and burning more fuel per cycle.
- You can see or hear arcing in a dark engine bay. A blue spark jumping from a wire to the block or a neighboring component is a definitive sign of insulation breakdown — replace the set before it damages the ignition coil.
Frequently asked questions
- How often should spark plug wires be replaced, and should I do them with the plugs? Standard copper-core wire sets are typically replaced every 30,000–40,000 miles; silicone or spiral-core sets can last 60,000–80,000 miles. Replacing wires at the same time as spark plugs is strongly recommended — labor overlaps significantly, and a fresh set of plugs misfiring through old, worn-out wires defeats the purpose of the plug replacement.
- Are aftermarket spark plug wire sets worth buying, or should I stick with OEM? OEM sets are engineered to match the suppression requirements and boot geometry of your specific engine, which matters on vehicles with closely packed ignition components or sensitive electronics. Quality aftermarket brands — ACCEL, NGK, MSD, Standard Motor Products — match or exceed OEM specs and often cost 30–50% less. Avoid no-name sets that don't spec out wire resistance; those will cause RFI issues with knock sensors and O2 sensors.
- What does a spark plug wire set replacement typically cost, and how hard is it to DIY? Parts run roughly $20–$120 depending on vehicle and brand; shop labor adds $50–$150 on most four-cylinder engines, more on V6/V8s with tight packaging. DIY difficulty is low to moderate — the main rule is replacing one wire at a time to avoid mixing up firing order. A V8 with wires buried under intake plenums or coil packs is harder, but still a reasonable Saturday job with a repair manual.















































