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Parts for your 2005 Toyota Land cruiser-Spark plugs
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2005 Toyota Land Cruiser spark plugs: petrol vs diesel, plus easy servicing tips
For 2005 Toyota Land Cruiser models sold in Australia and New Zealand, whether spark plugs are relevant depends on the engine. The petrol 4.7‑litre V8 (2UZ‑FE, UZJ100) uses eight spark plugs. The diesel variants (1HD‑FTE in HDJ100, and 1HZ in HZJ105/70 Series) do not use spark plugs, they use compression ignition and are equipped with glow plugs instead. This is consistent with the Toyota UZJ100 Repair Manual and Toyota HDJ100/HZJ105 manuals, as well as NGK and Denso plug catalogues and Toyota AU/NZ service schedules.
Why diesels don’t have spark plugs: diesel engines ignite the air‑fuel mix by heat from high compression, so they don’t need a spark. Glow plugs simply aid cold starts by warming the combustion chambers, then switch off as the engine runs.
For owners of the 2005 Land Cruiser with the petrol 2UZ‑FE V8, spark plugs do vital work. Each plug delivers a precise spark to ignite the air‑fuel mix, keeping that big V8 smooth, responsive, and efficient on‑road and out bush. Toyota specifies long‑life iridium plugs for this engine (commonly Denso SK20R11 or NGK IFR6A11 equivalents). The fine‑wire iridium tip resists wear and holds a clean, strong spark for a long service life.
Servicing advice that fits AU/NZ conditions:
- Replacement interval: typically up to 160,000 km for iridium under normal driving per Toyota schedules, bring that forward to around 100,000–120,000 km if towing, doing lots of short trips, dusty tracks, or heavy loads.
- Gap: plugs are pre‑gapped around 1.0–1.1 mm, avoid re‑gapping fine‑wire iridium tips.
- Torque: tighten to about 18 N·m on the alloy heads, start plugs by hand to avoid cross‑threading.
- No anti‑seize needed on modern nickel‑plated plugs (per NGK/Denso guidance). If it’s used, reduce torque accordingly.
- Coil‑on‑plug boots: check for cracking or carbon tracking, a light smear of silicone dielectric grease on the inside of the boot helps future removal and sealing.
- Keep grit out: blow debris from the plug wells before removal so nothing falls into the cylinder.
Signs it’s time: harder starting, a lumpy idle, sluggish climbs, increased fuel use, or misfire under load. Fresh OE‑spec iridium plugs restore crisp throttle and smoother running. Pair the job with an air filter check, and consider inspecting ignition coils if there’s a persistent misfire. With the right plugs in and torqued correctly, the 2UZ‑FE stays happy for many more kilometres—perfect for big family trips or a run up the coast.
Popular questions about 2005 Toyota Land Cruiser spark plugs
Which spark plugs suit a 2005 Land Cruiser 4.7 V8, and what’s the gap?
For the 2UZ‑FE petrol V8, OE‑equivalent iridium plugs such as Denso SK20R11 or NGK IFR6A11 are commonly specified in Toyota documentation and major plug catalogues. They come pre‑gapped around 1.0–1.1 mm and generally shouldn’t be re‑gapped due to the fine‑wire iridium centre electrode.
Always match heat range and reach to the 2UZ‑FE spec and install to about 18 N·m on the alloy heads.
How often should the plugs be changed on a 2005 petrol Land Cruiser?
Under normal Aussie and Kiwi driving, iridium plugs can go up to about 160,000 km per Toyota service schedules. If you tow, do frequent short trips, or run dusty outback roads, consider changing closer to 100,000–120,000 km and inspecting at each major service.
If you notice misfires, poor fuel economy, or sluggish performance, bring the change forward.
Does a 2005 Land Cruiser diesel have spark plugs?
No. The diesel 1HD‑FTE and 1HZ engines ignite via compression and use glow plugs only for cold starting. There are no spark plugs on these engines.
If cold starts are rough on a diesel, have the glow plugs and their control system checked instead.