Holy ****, 117k and stock plugs!?
I did mine at 30k and they looked pretty rough, 2 of them were very rusted.
Doing the plugs on the v8 is SUPER EASY.
I guess i've worked on tighter cars, because i thought there was plenty of room to work....of course that's once you disconnect a couple plastic lines and take the air intake hose off....piece of cake.
It's very tight where the spark plug goes down into, so be careful, there's just enough room to fit an extended socket down there, so it kind of sucks if your extension pops off or if the socket wont let go of the plug and you can't feel the plug as you try to screw it back in.
Just take your time, and play it cool.
I think you need a swivel piece to get around the fuel line or some crap on one of the passenger side plugs, i can't remember, but you can buy that at wal-mart.
I used Autolite regulars I think, I would never use Bosch in a Ford, heard too many horror stories.
Could be superstition but people I know personally have had problems with them.
Stick with motorcraft or autolite
No need to go super fancy with double plats or anything.
If you want to replace the Coils, go for it, like the other guy said, the v8's don't have spark plug wires, it's just a little coil thing attached over the spark-plug boot....which you will remove before getting to each plug anyways!
There are some web-sites that sell aftermarket coils for our trucks....but you have to search 99-04 mustang GT, i believe all the coils from those cars are the same....since the motors are, as long as it's a 2v motor.
They did a test on a mustang magazine and got around a 27hp gain from 60,000volt or or 75k volt coils, cant remember exactly.
People still dispute it today, but dyno numbers are dyno numbers!
Im not saying to buy them(they cost $500 anyways), but just food for though maybe.