DaveKillens wrote:In aviation, dual spark plugs per cylinder is common practice. In fact, aircraft reciprocating engines carry two completely independent ignition sources, obviously for reduncancy and safety.
A second use for two spark plugs is to compensate for poor fuel burn, or an irregular flame front.
Additionally, the physical geometry of the combustion chamber, the location of the valves, and requirements for coolant passages may dictate spark plug placement.
In the 'Bulldog' engine fitted to the Auster AOP9 as used by the British Army, they made a complete joke of the safety issue, much like in twin engined but single gearbox/rotor helicopters.
On the Bulldog they fitted dual magnetoes and dual plugs but drove the magnetoes off one drive gear, so much for redundency for safety.
This is why I will not fly in helicopters under 500 feet. Some may have two engines but they only have one gearbox and in most cases one rotor. Under 500ft and you are in a potential brick with no height to go on autorotate. The twin rotor tilt wing joke the Osprey is even worse with so much machinery to go wrong and absolutely no glide capability, it is and is proven as a death trap.