---
title: "Harley Spark Plug Cross Reference: NGK, Champion, Denso"
slug: "harley-davidson-spark-plug-cross-reference"
description: "Wrong heat range fouls or detonates. Cross reference every HD engine - Panhead through M8 - to NGK, Champion, and Denso. Gap specs and OEM numbers all here."
pubDate: 2019-11-22T00:00:00.000Z
canonical: https://bobberbrothers.com/pages/harley-davidson-spark-plug-cross-reference/
---
Pulled the plugs on a buddy's Twin Cam 96 last month and found one NGK and one Champion. Different brands, different heat ranges, both wrong for the motor. The bike ran - sure, it ran rough, fouled on one side, and felt lazy above 3,000 RPM. He'd been chasing that misfire for weeks. Five minutes and eight bucks worth of correct plugs fixed it completely.

Spark plugs are the cheapest performance part on your Harley and the most commonly screwed up. Guys grab whatever the parts store has, eyeball the thread size, and call it good. Works until it doesn't - and when it doesn't, you get fouling, misfires, detonation, or worse. We've seen holes burned through pistons because someone ran a plug two heat ranges too hot and didn't check.

This guide covers the correct cross-reference for every major Harley engine family, from Panhead to Milwaukee-Eight. OEM part numbers crossed to NGK, Champion, Denso, and others. Plus the gap specs and heat range info that actually matter.

## How Spark Plugs Work (The Short Version)

The plug fires a high-voltage arc across its electrode gap, igniting the air-fuel mixture. Simple concept. The details that matter:

**Heat range** controls how fast the plug sheds heat from the electrode tip to the cylinder head. A "hot" plug retains more heat - good for low-RPM riding, keeps the electrode clean. A "cold" plug sheds heat faster - prevents pre-ignition under high-RPM, high-load conditions. Every engine has a designed-in heat range. Wrong heat range means detonation (too hot) or carbon fouling (too cold).

**Electrode gap** is the distance the spark must jump. Too wide and the spark can't bridge it. Too narrow and combustion is incomplete. Harley specs gap in thousandths of an inch - measure it, don't assume.

**Thread size and reach** must match the cylinder head physically. Harley Big Twins have used different spark plug threads across generations. Wrong reach can hit the piston (too long) or recess into the head with a weak spark (too short). This is not a place to improvise.

## Cross Reference by Engine Family

The tables below are organized by engine family with OEM Harley part numbers first, followed by direct equivalents. Cross-reference data is compiled from [harley-performance.com's spark plug chart](https://www.bikerrated.com/gear/spark-plugs/harley-davidson/), [BikerRated's cross reference guide](https://bikerrated.com/gear/maintenance/harley-davidson-spark-plug-cross-reference/), and [forum-verified data from the HD community](https://www.harley-davidsonforums.com/threads/sparkplug-cross-reference-chart.6061/).

### Panhead and Early Shovelhead (1948-1974)

These engines use a 1/2"-20 thread plug with a short reach. The combustion chamber runs relatively cool compared to later designs.

**OEM Harley number:** 4R / 4R5

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 4R / 4R5 |
| Harley-Davidson Gold | 4R5G |
| NGK | B6HS |
| Champion | RL82YC |
| Denso | W16FS-U |
| Bosch | W5AC |
| Autolite | 4123 |

**Gap:** 0.025" - 0.030"

These older plugs are non-resistor design. If you've upgraded to electronic ignition (Dyna S, Pertronix, or similar), switching to a resistor-type plug like the NGK BR6HS reduces radio interference without affecting performance.

### Late Shovelhead (1975-1984)

Redesigned cylinder heads with a different combustion chamber shape and hotter-running architecture changed the plug spec.

**OEM Harley number:** 5R6A (1975-1981), 5RL (1982-1984)

| Brand | 1975-1981 | 1982-1984 |
|---|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 5R6A | 5RL |
| Harley-Davidson Gold | 5R6AG | 5R6AG |
| Screamin' Eagle | EVS13S | SH13S |
| NGK | BPR5ES-11 | BPR5ES-11 |
| NGK Iridium | BPR5EIX-11 | BPR5EIX-11 |
| Champion | RN12YC | RN13LYC |
| Denso Iridium | IW16 | IW16 |
| Bosch | WR8DC4 | WR8DC4 |

**Gap:** 0.038" - 0.043"

The Shovelhead engine runs hot. Correct heat range matters more here than on almost any other Harley. If your Shovel detonates under load, check plugs before throwing money at carb jetting.

### Evolution Big Twin 1340cc (1984-1999)

The Evo's aluminum heads dissipate heat much better than the Shovelhead's iron castings. The plug interface dimensions carried over, so the part number is the same.

**OEM Harley number:** 5R6A

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 5R6A |
| Harley-Davidson Gold | 5R6AG |
| Harley-Davidson Platinum | 5R6APP |
| Screamin' Eagle | EVS13S |
| NGK | BPR5ES-11 |
| NGK Iridium | BPR5EIX-11 |
| NGK Platinum | BPR5EVX-11 |
| Champion | RN12YC |
| Denso Iridium | IW16 |
| Bosch | WR8DP |
| Autolite | 4265 |

**Gap:** 0.038" - 0.043"

For Evo builds with [aftermarket crate motors from S&S](/pages/harley-davidson-evo-crate-motor/), confirm the plug spec with the engine manufacturer. S&S big-bore Evos may call for a different heat range than the stock 80" motor due to higher compression.

### Twin Cam 88 / 96 / 103 (1999-2017)

The Twin Cam family moved to a 12mm thread spark plug - a significant change from the 14mm plugs in the Evo and earlier engines. **Evo plugs do not fit Twin Cam heads.** Don't try.

**OEM Harley number:** 6R12

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 6R12 |
| Harley-Davidson Gold | 6R12G |
| Harley-Davidson Platinum | 6R12PP |
| Screamin' Eagle | EX12S |
| NGK | DCPR7E |
| NGK Iridium | DCPR7EIX |
| Champion | RA8HC (also listed as Champion #810) |
| Denso Standard | XU22EPR-U |
| Denso Iridium | IXU22 |
| Bosch | YR6LDE |
| Autolite | 4164 |

**Gap:** 0.038" - 0.043"

This is the same plug across the TC88, TC96, and TC103. The displacement changes came from bore and stroke, not head design. Whether you're running a 2001 Road King with the 88" or a 2016 Street Bob with the 103", the plug spec is identical.

Note: the [Champion RA8HC is the same plug as the Harley-Davidson 6R12](https://customhoj.com/blogs/mcblogg/cross-reference-tandstift) for Twin Cam applications. If you see either number, you've got the right part.

CVO and Screamin' Eagle models with the 110" (TC110) engine may use a different heat range - check your owner's manual.

One caveat on aftermarket plugs and warranty: using non-Harley-branded spark plugs will not void your warranty. The [Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act](https://bikerrated.com/gear/maintenance/harley-davidson-spark-plug-cross-reference/) prohibits manufacturers from requiring you to use their branded parts for warranty coverage. Run whatever brand you prefer - just make sure it's the correct specification.

### Milwaukee-Eight 107 / 114 / 117 (2017-Present)

The M-Eight moved to a completely different spark plug platform from the Twin Cam. It uses a 10mm thread plug (not 12mm like the Twin Cam), with a different reach and heat range. **Twin Cam plugs do not fit M-Eight heads.** Don't try.

**OEM Harley number:** 31600012 (6R10)

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson OEM | 31600012 (6R10) |
| NGK | CR9EB |
| NGK Iridium | CR9EIX |
| Champion | RG6HCC |
| Denso | IU27 |

**Gap:** 0.031" - 0.035"

The M-Eight runs higher compression (10.0:1 on the 107, 10.5:1 on the 114) and uses a completely different plug family than the Twin Cam. The NGK CR9EB is a compact 10mm-thread plug - a different series from the DCPR plugs used in Twin Cam engines. **Do not run Twin Cam plugs in an M-Eight head.**

### Sportster Evolution 883/1200 (1986-2021)

The Sportster Evo uses the same plug as the Twin Cam. Same OEM part number, which causes confusion - but the spec is correct for both.

**OEM Harley number:** 6R12

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 6R12 |
| NGK | DCPR7E |
| NGK Iridium | DCPR7EIX |
| Champion | RA8HC |
| Denso Iridium | IXU22 |
| Bosch | YR6LDE |
| Autolite | 4164 |

**Gap:** 0.038" - 0.043"

The 2004 Sportster redesign changed the frame and suspension but kept the same engine architecture and head design. Same plugs from 1986 through end of production.

### Ironhead Sportster and XR-1000 (Pre-1986)

Different plugs from the Evo Sportster:

| Brand | XL 1000/1100 | XR-1000 |
|---|---|---|
| Harley Standard | 4R5 | 6R7 |
| NGK | B6HS | B7EB |
| Champion | RL82YC | RN7YC |
| Denso Iridium | IWF22 | IW22 |

**Gap (XL 1000/1100):** 0.025" - 0.030"
**Gap (XR-1000):** 0.035" - 0.040"

### V-Rod (2002-2017)

Water-cooled Revolution engine - completely different plug from any air-cooled Harley.

**OEM Harley number:** 10R12A

| Brand | Part Number |
|---|---|
| Harley-Davidson Standard | 10R12A |
| NGK | DCPR8E |
| NGK Iridium | DCPR8EIX |
| Champion | RAX94YC |
| Denso Iridium | IXU24 |

**Gap:** 0.035" (0.9mm)

The V-Rod runs hotter (higher compression, water-cooled to tighter tolerances), hence the coldest plug in the NGK DCPR lineup: DCPR**8**E. Note the gap is tighter than air-cooled Harleys - the service manual specifies 0.035", not the 0.038"-0.043" used on Twin Cams.

## Quick Reference Summary

For fast lookup:

| Engine | Years | OEM # | NGK | Champion | Gap |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Panhead/Early Shovel | 1948-1974 | 4R/4R5 | B6HS | RL82YC | .025-.030" |
| Late Shovelhead | 1975-1984 | 5R6A | BPR5ES-11 | RN12YC | .038-.043" |
| Evo Big Twin | 1984-1999 | 5R6A | BPR5ES-11 | RN12YC | .038-.043" |
| Twin Cam 88/96/103 | 1999-2017 | 6R12 | DCPR7E | RA8HC | .038-.043" |
| Milwaukee-Eight | 2017+ | 31600012 (6R10) | CR9EB | RG6HCC | .031-.035" |
| Sportster Evo | 1986-2021 | 6R12 | DCPR7E | RA8HC | .038-.043" |
| Ironhead Sportster | Pre-1986 | 4R5 | B6HS | RL82YC | .025-.030" |
| V-Rod | 2002-2017 | 10R12A | DCPR8E | RAX94YC | .035" |

## Heat Range: Why It Matters More Than Brand

Riders get tribal about spark plug brands. "NGK only." "Champion all day." Doesn't matter. What matters is heat range.

Heat range is controlled by the length of the insulator nose - the ceramic piece surrounding the center electrode. Longer nose retains more heat (hotter plug). Shorter nose conducts heat to the head faster (colder plug). The OEM heat range is calibrated for a stock engine running stock compression on pump fuel.

**Go one step colder if:**
- High-compression pistons installed
- Heads ported for better flow
- Cam with more overlap
- White/blistered electrode tips when you pull the plugs

**Go one step hotter if:**
- Primarily low-speed, short-trip riding
- Heavy carbon fouling on a stock engine
- Rich-running condition you haven't fixed yet (bandaid, not a solution)

NGK heat ranges count backwards from some other brands - higher number means colder. So a DCPR8E is colder than a DCPR7E, which is colder than a DCPR6E. Denso counts in the same direction as NGK (higher number = colder). **Champion counts the opposite way - higher number means hotter.** This trips people up when cross-referencing between brands.

For most riders on stock or mildly modified engines, the OEM heat range is correct. Don't chase heat range changes unless you're seeing symptoms on the electrode.

## Reading Your Plugs

Pulling and inspecting plugs is the cheapest diagnostic tool you own. Here's what the electrode and insulator tell you:

**Tan/light brown insulator, light grey electrode.** Correct mixture, correct heat range. This is the target.

**Black, dry sooty deposits.** Rich mixture or carbon fouling. Too much fuel, weak spark, or too cold a heat range. Check carb jetting (Evo and older), fuel map (Twin Cam, M-Eight), air filter, and ignition.

**Black, wet, oily deposits.** Oil in the combustion chamber - worn valve guides, worn rings, or leaking intake seal. Fix the cause. A hotter plug won't solve oil consumption.

**White/blistered insulator, eroded electrode.** Running dangerously hot. Lean mixture, wrong heat range, or ignition timing advanced too far. Sustained overheating causes detonation and piston damage. Pull over and diagnose this immediately.

**Heavy grey/brown crusty deposits.** Fuel additive buildup or bad fuel. On V-Rods, could indicate coolant entering combustion chamber. On air-cooled bikes, usually means excessive fuel additive use.

## Installation Tips

**Anti-seize on threads.** Always. Harley heads are aluminum. Steel plug threads in aluminum will gall and seize after heat cycles. Thin film on the threads only - keep it off the electrode and insulator.

**Torque specs.** 12-18 ft-lbs for 12mm plugs (Twin Cam, M-Eight, Evo Sportster). 18-22 ft-lbs for 14mm plugs in aluminum heads (Evo Big Twin), 18-28 ft-lbs for 14mm plugs in cast iron heads (Shovelhead). If your torque wrench doesn't fit the plug well, use hand-tight plus 1/8 to 1/4 turn with a wrench. Not ideal, but better than stripping aluminum threads.

**Gap every new plug.** Pre-gapped from the box is close but not always exact. Use a wire-type gauge, not a coin-type. Coin gauges can bend the ground electrode.

**Replace in pairs.** Both cylinders see similar conditions on a V-twin. If one plug is worn, the other is too.

**Inspection interval.** Harley specifies inspection every 5,000 miles and replacement every 10,000. With iridium plugs, you can push to 15,000-20,000 miles, but pull and inspect at 10K regardless. A plug reading tells you things no diagnostic computer can.

## Plugs in the Context of Your Engine

Spark plugs don't exist in isolation. They're part of a combustion system that includes fuel delivery, ignition timing, compression, and cooling. If your plugs are consistently reading wrong, the plug isn't the problem - something upstream is.

For Twin Cam 96 riders specifically, our [96 cubic inch motor guide](/pages/harley-davidson-96-cubic-inch-motor/) covers the common issues - cam chain tensioners, compensator noise, heat management - that can affect how plugs read and perform. A motor with drifting cam timing from worn tensioners will foul plugs no matter what brand you install.

For the full picture of how each engine generation evolved and what changed between them, our [Harley-Davidson history guide](/pages/harley-davidson-history-guide/) traces the engineering from Flathead through Milwaukee-Eight. And if you're identifying your engine by [VIN](/pages/harley-davidson-vin-lookup/) to figure out which plug chart applies, that guide has you covered.

Wrench on your own ride. Keep the right plugs on the shelf. And rep the culture while you do it - check out our [gear collection](/collections/all/). We make stuff for riders who actually turn wrenches.

## Sources

- [Harley-Performance.com - Harley Spark Plug Chart](https://www.bikerrated.com/gear/spark-plugs/harley-davidson/) - cross-reference table for OEM and aftermarket spark plugs by engine family
- [BikerRated - Harley-Davidson Spark Plug Cross Reference](https://bikerrated.com/gear/maintenance/harley-davidson-spark-plug-cross-reference/) - brand-by-brand plug equivalents and Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act coverage
- [Champion Spark Plugs - Application Catalog](https://www.championautoparts.com/Parts-Matter/buying-guides/spark-plug-guide.html) - OEM cross-reference data for Champion replacement plugs
- [Harley-Davidson Service Information Portal](https://serviceinfo.harley-davidson.com/) - factory service manuals with OEM spark plug specifications, gap settings, and torque specs