Can someone tell me in a nutshell the difference between the blue filters and the white ones. I bought 2 white ones and was wondering if they were any good?
I am always afraid that a more restrictive filter will lead to a premature bypass. Doesn't matter how fine a filter is, once it by-passes, up goes all the dirt...quote:
Originally posted by 2004 F150 4x4:
Thanks for the replies. That clears that up.
I think that I would rather have the better flow than the better filtering but who really knows.
Thanks Again.
Dave
I am not so sure that all the dirt washes off an oil filter so quickly. Ever try to blow the dirt off your air filter?quote:
I am always afraid that a more restrictive filter will lead to a premature bypass. Doesn't matter how fine a filter is, once it by-passes, up goes all the dirt...
When I am "running down the road" at 2000 RPM my oil is being filtered 5.6 times a minute (7 gallons a minute with a 5 quart sump). I doubt that is much difference in the quality of the oil anywhere in the engine.quote:
Originally posted by ZR2RANDO:
Winston
The oil in the "dirty" side of the filter is significantly dirtier than the clean side. It's not just the stuff trapped in the paper.
The oil in the pan is also much dirtier than the oil just after the filter.
Bypass is just to prevent damage to the filter and to prevent oil starvation to the motor...the less the better.
It's gonna happen, but happenin less is bess...
For me, flow ranks higher, I don't leave the oil in long enough to get toooo dirty.
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Run Auto-rx in an engine that has has 3,000 OCIs for 50,000 miles. You would think the engine would be really clean but the oil filter from the rinse phase will amaze you!quote:
Originally posted by HerkyJim:
Hmmm. What kind of particulates? Cigarette smoke is particulates, but I couldn't see the particles being particularly troublesome (childrens' lungs excepted, of course). Do these particles cling together and become granules or globules? Would they be able to score the cylinder walls or crankshaft journals or camshaft lobes? Any rigorous but not-too-technical references on the web?
I'm sorry, I can't follow your logic. If the oil contamination is a continous process (and I agree with that) then the oil on both sides of the filter would be about the same because the only difference is 1 pass 10 seconds ago through the filter. The oil is flowing one way and taking a sample from each side of the filter is of no value in this instance.quote:
Originally posted by ZR2RANDO:
Ugly3,
It's cumulative; the engine is burning fuel and creating soot. Cold engines don’t burn fuel the same way that warmed up engines do either. The oil is gradually degrading with time and use. Each pass the oil makes through the engine may not be a significant individual thing, but it adds up after a few thousand miles, or several hours of operation.
I have water filters on the water line coming into my house from my well for example, it takes a few months but they do gradually get dirty, and once they start getting dirty, they get dirtier quicker, same thing with the air filter in my house, filters get more efficient with use, it’s just a gradual thing.
3000 miles may not be a big deal for most filters, but 5,6, or 10000 miles can be a different situation.