I disagree about the assessment of the Titanium being the only Fram worthy of use. I would use any Fram; they are all constructed well enough to do their job. When fully assembled, even the TG would seal properly at the leaf spring. There is mention of "leaking" in the video; where's the proof that any of these would "leak" when the components are properly assembled? Theory is often disproved by reality. I abhor conclusions like the one made in this video; there is a presumption of failure when not one iota of proper testing goes into the assessment.
Speaking of leaf springs, just about every filter in that video has one; the lone exception being the Wix. Back in the day here on BITOG, leaf springs were (unjustly) derided. Yet now, leaf springs are ignored. This just goes to show how BITOG BIAS ebbs and flows thru the years. What seems important today won't be a year from now, simply because of human interest waning for the next best thing to argue about.
Additionally, the AC/Delco is the only one with a nitrile ADBV. Gosh - it wasn't that long ago that topic of ADBV material was all the rage to argue about, and yet it goes completely ignored in the video. But here we are, a few years later and no mention of it.
Further, the base-plate holes are a non-issue; this has been discussed many times. The flow rate thru the holes in a typical filter is WELL MORE than enough to support what the engine PD pump will push. Just because the holes are larger in the Titanium does not mean it flows more; the filter will only flow what the pump pushes, and as long as the volumetric flow is sufficient thru the baseplate, anything "more" (larger holes) doesn't make the oil go any faster. The pump determines flow rate, not the filter. Period.
The pleat count is also moot, generally. Pleat count implies how much media surface area is present. If the difference is only a few pleats, the differential is so small that it won't manifest into a "real world" difference. The only time more pleats (surface area) would be of significant benefit is if you ran the filter to the edge of it's lifespan, to where it were at risk of going into perpetual bypass. We've never had a BITOGer here come up with any proof that "normal" filters are at the edge of holding capacity. Theory runs amok on BITOG, but proof is scant. I've seen filters run for up to 3x their "rated" duration, and the media still was in fine shape.
Also, the presence of a BP in the filter itself is of no concern for this application. Having a BP in the filter is only a secondary function as the true BP is in the engine itself. One could even argue that, in a sake of redundancy, having a filter BP would be some minor benefit should the BP in the engine ever fail in a closed position (highly unlikely). So calling that out in the video should have zero weight to choosing a filter for these applications.
The greatest concern should be efficiency. In this video, the only one I'd shy away from would be the Boss in that regard. All the others are well more than good enough to do a decent job.
My next point would be the center tube and how the "holes" in that are constructed; louvered holes can often be poorly punched and potentially restrict flow (much, much more of a concern than the base-plate). Yet that was completely ignored in the video; not even a wiff of discussion regarding center tubes.
This video reminds me of the old phrase "A little bit of knowledge is dangerous". People see things and make conclusions based on bias and their limited understanding of how the components of an assembly are designed to function relative to the application they are put into.
This video represents classic bench-racing at its finest. And to be fair ... this video isn't alone; most of the filter videos seen on YT are nearly-useless. They make conclusions based on bad assumptions, founded in poorly reasoned bias.
All these filters would do their job well enough that the wear rate delta they might produce would be moot for any "normal" use. The Boss might not filter as well; the only exception.
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Robvette - thanks for doing the video.