Squeeto wrote:
For warmer temperatures, the glow plug is on for a very short time anyway. Probably most of the "wear" is from the longer burn times for colder weather (which you need and shouldn't disable) not from the short burn times of warm weather.
I may be wrong about this. Seems the glow plug can stay on far longer than needed (programming) and thus during the summer, with the added temperature, it does the most damage.
I would like to see reprogramming (seems now in progress) and metal glow plugs.