Thanks for the great feedback, folks. Good stuff. My Bosch filters were made-in-USA Champions.
Here's a hypothetical: I claim I'm going to deliver "up to 42% more" winter heating oil to your basement than the competition. Instead, I deliver 15-50% LESS, without disclosing same, and then charge you a higher price over my counterparts. Is this a problem?
"Bosch is not trying to fool anyone." Say what???
I beg to differ. I'm able to measure their deception on my lie-o-meter, and it's registering 42%.
All filters claim to be "superior," "premium," etc. I ignore that stuff -- it's meaningless marketing speak, of course -- but I often believe firms when they QUANTIFY how their product is better (silly me). If their claims are proven untrue, I ignore qualifiers such as "up to" and acknowledge the obvious -- we've been conned.
I hesitated to slam an entire brand of filters based on one part #, but in fact, Bosch #3312 is probably one of their best sellers, fitting any number of Hondas, Chryslers, Mitsubishis, Hundais, and older Mazdas. A very popular application. Plus, the magazine's results fairly matched NTPOG.ORG's results when they tested Honda filters. No aspects of filters are more important than media area and pore size/flow.
I certainly wouldn't be surprised if European-market Bosch filters are of different construction, and of significantly higher quality as well. I'd guess that their Euro-market products are first-rate.
G-ManII: I read your comments as to (paraphrasing) "Yeah, but there were other Champions that did well in the test...and the STP is identical to the SuperTech" and "What is someone thinking when they read 'Made in USA? A superior German-made Bosch filter?'" But I'm at a loss as to what any of that has to do with "up to 42% more media" reflecting reality, with reality being 15-50% LESS media, coupled with a premium price. I specifically commented on Bosch's numerical claims, not on Champions, STPs, SuperTechs, or Euro-versus-USA products.
[ February 20, 2004, 10:23 PM: Message edited by: TC ]