AEM Dryflow filters

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Just curious if anyone has used these and if they are indeed good filters. I want to get one cuz i dont have to oil them and it plug my mass air flow sensor. i have not heard much about them from anyone, or am i just out of the loop
Chevy 8.1 2500hd
 
Paper filter no need to oil and nothing filters dirt from the air better then paper. All these other air filters are just meant to separate you and your wallet of cash. They do absolutely nothing for you that their OEM paper filter is not already doing! If you had a car or truck from the 1980's it would be different but modern designs have more flow then they can use because restrictive air intakes hurt miles per gallon and interferes with emissions. It is P.T Barnum all over it again "Their is a sucker born every minute!" I think he once said!Their is a place for these types of filters but not on a production vehicle in daily use in suburban America! If you want more flow which again you do not need go tothe junk yard and get an air box from A Dura Max Diesel and run their monster paper filter. I writen up before how you can change the depth of the air box to suite almost any need.
 
Mr. Browning: I would point out that the brand specifically asked about by the OP, AEM, is a dry filter and has a 99+ percent filtering ability... plus is washable.

I basically agree with your other points. More airflow from a performance filter any type is useless with regards to power unless your engine needs more airflow capacity because you've modified it in some other way. If there is any gain in a
stock(ish) vehicle, it will come at the extreme upper end of the rpm range. Some of the performance filters, as you mention, are a step back in filtration ability, which is not good... but not the AEM. It's designed to have a high filtering ability. Here are some interesting stats:

I recently had an AEM replacement panel filter flowbenched versus the equivalent Motorcraft part number and the MC actually outflowed the AEM.. a fact that AEM did not try to hide. Averaged results from several tests by two classes below:

Vehicle Air fitler - '05 F-150 5.4L
Tested on Superflow SF600 @ UNOH

Stock MC Filter in Stock Housing- 621.58 cfm
AEM Panel Filter in Stock Housing- 592.36 cfm
AEM Brute Force Intake System- 733.30 cfm
Conical Filter Element Alone- 1077.25 cfm
The 5.4L @ 5000 rpm needs 405.8 cfm @ 85% VE

Going back to the stock filter vs the replacement, the AEM appears (to me) to have more dirt holding ability than the MC, plus... it's cleanable. That would be the advantage. Buy one filter at about double the price of a good quality standard replacement and use it forever.

I do not have filtration tests of the MC filter, but I assume it to be as good as most better quality replacements, in the 98-99 percent range.
 
Thanks guys,

ya all im looking for is a quality filter that wont need replacement every 6 months, just clean. I tow with the truck i want to put it on so upper rpm power would be good, but the truck is also a big block chevy 8.1
 
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