Has anyone been using them without issue? I have a bunch of older "Jobber" filters and I'm using them on my 24 year old beater running them at 5K OCI's. Would they still perform ok on my new 2024 that uses 0W-20 keeping the same service schedule?
I've seen some very good quality filters labeled "Made in China". Your almost historic (25 yrs) old vehicle won't mind especially at 5k.Has anyone been using them without issue? I have a bunch of older "Jobber" filters and I'm using them on my 24 year old beater running them at 5K OCI's. Would they still perform ok on my new 2024 that uses 0W-20 keeping the same service schedule?
Ha ha, yeah take one for the team.You can always cut one of your stash open and post pictures of the internals here for our review and criticism.
absolutely many Chinese filters are made top notch these days.Has anyone been using them without issue? I have a bunch of older "Jobber" filters and I'm using them on my 24 year old beater running them at 5K OCI's. Would they still perform ok on my new 2024 that uses 0W-20 keeping the same service schedule?
The "China" aspect is of no relevance if a name brand filter, it's still made to Fortune 500 level standards. The issue for me is that there's likely better filters offering finer micron filtration for your newer ride. The 24 year old beater is of less concern, of course. But technically even the jobber filters should work OK on your 2024 assuming reasonable service frequency (no 15K or 20K intervals).Has anyone been using them without issue? I have a bunch of older "Jobber" filters and I'm using them on my 24 year old beater running them at 5K OCI's. Would they still perform ok on my new 2024 that uses 0W-20 keeping the same service schedule?
My basic rule:
Products made by a Chinese company = BAD.
Products made by a western Fortune 1000 company in one of their Chinese located plants = GOOD. The product will be the same quality as that made in their Nebraska plant. Corporate and ISO quality standards ensure that.
The manufacturer is key, rather than country of origin. Corporations are global now.
I don't think that's an issue with Fortune 500 firms. They'll certainly rebadge Chinese sourced parts, but not without running them by their own engineers for quality control and performance evaluation, and then occasionally auditing and testing those same parts throughout production runs. They won't simply stamp their name on Chinese junk with no formal controls in place.Except when the western Fortune 1000 company is simply buying cheap Chines stuff and rebadging it. Then you are buying the same cheap Chinese stuff made by a Chinese company, just at a much higher price. I think this happens a lot.