In the 21st century, it is not unusual for a set of spark plugs to last a decade or longer; gone are the days when changing the plugs annually was common.
1919 January, Practical hints on running a gas engine, United States Department of Agriculture:
With all engines using spark plugs it is comparatively easy to ascertain whether the ignition system is working properly.
Helen is a real spark plug. We're lucky she's on the team.
2003, Growing for Market: News and Ideas for Market Gardeners:
Steve Pincus, a Madison-area farmer who sells produce to L'Etoile, says admiringly of Odessa: "She's a spark plug. She's out there speaking out about sustainable agriculture and local food."
2009 May 30, Al Baker, “Investigators Reviewing a Timeline of Seconds That Led to a Police Shooting”, in New York Times[1]:
Mr. Santiago used a sparkplug to smash the driver’s side window.
(military) A rod (for cylindrical secondaries) or sphere (for spherical secondaries) of fissile material at the center of the secondary of a multistage thermonuclear weapon, which undergoes nuclear fission when compressed to supercriticality by the imploding secondary, helping to raise the secondary to the pressures and temperatures necessary to ignite nuclear fusion in the secondary's fusion fuel.