Originally Posted By: Beachboy
My dad bought a 1952 Ford pickup brand new, and it had the bypass type oil filter which filtered a small sidestream. Dad never believed in spending money for vehicle maintenance, and he said he never changed that orginal oil filter. On top of that, he'd use the drained oil out of the family car to replenish the pickup. That pickup was still running fine on the original engine when we sold it in 1990 after his death.
My first car in high school was a 1959 imported Ford with a 1.7 liter four cylinder engine. I looked for months for the oil filter on that thing, and I never could find it. Come to find out, it was built without one, as oil filters weren't commonly used in Europe. The sump only held two quarts, so I just changed the oil every couple of months. I only drove it for two years, but I never had any lubrication based problems. I also owned a 1942 Willys MB Jeep. No oil filter on that sucker, either.
Growing up on a farm, none of our farm equipment (tractors, combines, etc) ever came equipped with filters and I can guarantee that the oil was only topped off, never changed. Its obvious the old cast iron engines with their generous tolerances endured a lot more abuse than today's engines.
those engines were tough. Could you imagine the qualityod those engines with the latest technology , better seal material and machine work . Instead of CAD designed down the the least quality /material that will stand up to the emission warranties.