.045 I believe Incorrect. Not sure how many mods there are, but for 1992 Ford Crown Vic, the gap setting should be between .052- .056.
crown
crown
0.050
When you have a dental crown, it is less common to have a cavity on the tooth because it is protected. However, the place where the crown meets the tooth can still get a cavity, that is why hygiene is important even though a crown is on the tooth, especially flossing. The two ways to get a cavity under a crown are:A cavity started between the crown and the tooth at the gum level.There was a cavity left on the tooth when the crown was put (more rare).
0.52-0.56
The part of a tooth that is exposed and above the gum is called "crown", not to confuse with a crown that is prothesis to restore a heavily damaged tooth. The part of a tooth that is hidden inside the bone is called "root".
.052-.055
Its the person chewing the gum that produces the bubbles, not the bubble gum itself. Air being trapped into a "gap" ,so to speak, in the gum creates a bubble. Some gum is easier to blow bubbles with because of how far the gum can stretch with out breaking and letting air out.
I had this done many years ago as i had a huge gap between my front teeth....they also took bone out. It was the only way I could get a brace to close the gap
5 gum
According to my Chilton's Auto Repair Manual : For a 1987 Ford Crown Victoria : ( .044 inch spark plug gap ) for the 5.0 / 302 and the 5.8 / 351