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Gen II Spark Plugs - OE Denso SK16R11 (3324) vs Denso SK16RP11 (3353)

Discussion in 'Gen 2 Prius Care, Maintenance and Troubleshooting' started by ggarb, Dec 3, 2011.

  1. ggarb

    ggarb Member

    Joined:
    Apr 5, 2004
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    Silicon Valley, CA
    Vehicle:
    2004 Prius
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    N/A
    With 125,000 miles on my 2004 Prius I'm thinking of replacing my spark plugs.

    I was thinking I might be lazy and let my local dealer, Sunnyvale Toyota, install them, then I did some research here in Priuschat. The process of installing the plugs sounds straightforward enough (as long as the old ones aren't "frozen" in place). Looks like I should be able to change them out in an hour or less. OE replacement Denso plugs are around ten bucks each on Amazon and RockAuto. And Sunnyvale Toyota charges $234 for this service. I could stand to save most of that money.

    Now that I've decided to change the plugs myself, I'm looking to order them online.
    I see that Denso makes the OE part SK16R11 (3324), plus a slightly more expensive variant SK16RP11 (3353) they also show as appropriate for the Prius.

    What I haven't been able to figure out is the difference between these two Denso plugs.
    Their specs on the Denso site look identical. Both have a platinum ground strap.

    Does anybody know what the difference is?

    Thanks.
     
  2. ggarb

    ggarb Member

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    Location:
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    Vehicle:
    2004 Prius
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    I wrote to Denso via their website Contact Us: DENSO Iridium and asked about the difference between the SK16R11 and the SK16RP11 plugs.
    After ten days I did not get a response, so I called their customer service at (310) 834-6352 and just spoke with Deanna.

    She explained that the heat range is the same, the P means there is a double layer of Platinum - 1.55 mm projected.

    I still am not sure what benefit this brings for my Prius, but at least I have more information.

    It's only a buck or two per plug more for the RP variant, so that's what I'll probably go with.

    /Gordon


     
  3. ggarb

    ggarb Member

    Joined:
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    Location:
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    And now that I've talked with them, I found the page on the Denso web site that decodes their spark plug numbers.

    DENSO SPARK PLUGS
     
    SFO likes this.
  4. Prius Dragster

    Prius Dragster Junior Member

    Joined:
    Dec 30, 2017
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    Location:
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    Vehicle:
    2007 Prius
    Model:
    Two
    I just changed the spark plugs in my 2007 Gen II. 114,629 miles. The process was simple enough and really only required moving the air cleaner housing and the black relay box above the coils for easy access. I took my time and cleaned parts and areas hidden by the two components I moved out of the way. The old Denso SK16R11 Iridium were replaced with the same Denso's obtained on E-bay at about $8.00 a piece. Pics of the old and new plugs (#1 cylinder) are attached below. Hope to see at least a slight increase in mpg now that this
    is done.

    IMG_2619.JPG IMG_2620.JPG
     
    TheChip likes this.