Skip the filter change that costs as much as a barley pop at the local watering hole? Not me.
Who is rinsing and rerolling their condoms?
Who is rinsing and rerolling their condoms?
What's a condom?Skip the filter change that costs as much as a barley pop at the local watering hole? Not me.
Who is rinsing and rerolling their condoms?
I personally would never do it but for years I had the dealership change my oil and I learned a couple years ago that Honda says you only need to change the filter every other oil change.
Now that I do it myself, I change the filter every time because if Im already under the car and the filter is right next to the drain plug, why wouldnt I change the filter?
I look at it as cheap insurance. Im sure its probably fine but if Im under there, Im just going to change the filter out. It kind of goes double with my Accord because it only gets oil changes every 12k and I dont love the idea of running an oil filter 24k.Yes many are making this point and that's why I'm considering skipping it. My filter is not hard to reach but it makes a mess on the frame and passenger side tire if I'm not careful so that's why I'm considering it.
Oh wow that's a long interval. Now that I would be uncomfortable with. 5,000 miles for me. That's one of the reasons I am considering doubling up on the filter. If it is on for less than 1 year and 10,000 miles that's half the 20K listed as lifespan.I look at it as cheap insurance. Im sure its probably fine but if Im under there, Im just going to change the filter out. It kind of goes double with my Accord because it only gets oil changes every 12k and I dont love the idea of running an oil filter 24k.
So, your reason to not replace every change is what, again? Cost? Convenience? Cleanliness? Effectiveness? Efficiency?First post from new member here I'm not a real motorhead but like reading through the forums on here.
I have a 2014 V6 Honda Accord coupe with a manual transmission. The car only has 20,000 miles on it and I must say it is kind of fun to drive. I drive conservatively most of the time but the car sees redline pretty often on 2nd and 3rd gear pulls. Because I drive it pretty aggressively at times I'm sticking to 5,000 mile oil changes at which point my maintenance minder is usually at 20 or 30%. The car uses no oil between changes and runs iike a champ.
The oil change process is easy overall, but the filter is set up to where it makes a pretty big mess on the frame and also splashes some oil on the tire and rim if I'm not super careful.
I have been using Fram silver can filters (Tough Guard I believe), but am considering getting Ultras or Synthetic Endurance and switching the filters every other oil change. I figure an oil filter rated for 20,000 miles should definitely be good for a year and 10,000 miles. I've also read that an oil filter might actually become more effective at filtration when it is slightly clogged by particulates and the rationale made sense to me.
I also change the oil on my dad's 2012 CRV. The filter is super convenient on that car so I'll stick to 6K changes and silver cans for that one.
Am I crazy?
It's positioned where it's quite difficult to not make a mess under the car and even on the rim and tire.So, your reason to not replace every change is what, again? Cost? Convenience? Cleanliness? Effectiveness? Efficiency?
Buy 20k mile oil and oil filters and change the oil at 5k mile intervalsFirst post from new member here I'm not a real motorhead but like reading through the forums on here.
I have a 2014 V6 Honda Accord coupe with a manual transmission. The car only has 20,000 miles on it and I must say it is kind of fun to drive. I drive conservatively most of the time but the car sees redline pretty often on 2nd and 3rd gear pulls. Because I drive it pretty aggressively at times I'm sticking to 5,000 mile oil changes at which point my maintenance minder is usually at 20 or 30%. The car uses no oil between changes and runs iike a champ.
The oil change process is easy overall, but the filter is set up to where it makes a pretty big mess on the frame and also splashes some oil on the tire and rim if I'm not super careful.
I have been using Fram silver can filters (Tough Guard I believe), but am considering getting Ultras or Synthetic Endurance and switching the filters every other oil change. I figure an oil filter rated for 20,000 miles should definitely be good for a year and 10,000 miles. I've also read that an oil filter might actually become more effective at filtration when it is slightly clogged by particulates and the rationale made sense to me.
I also change the oil on my dad's 2012 CRV. The filter is super convenient on that car so I'll stick to 6K changes and silver cans for that one.
Am I crazy?
An oil filter that has a high efficiency based on the ISO 4548-12 efficiency test will actually retain already captured debris much better than a low efficiency oil filter. That is because if it was sloughing off already captured debris, by definition of the ISO efficiency it couldn't come out of that ISO test with high efficiency.As @ZeeOSix has pointed out, as a filter media loads up the increased delta p will dislodge already captured debris. With super high efficient media that could happen pretty quick.
Your last sentence goes against Lake Speed Jr.'s thoughts that the higher the mileage rating, the lower the efficiency. Filters that are built to last longer are less efficient so they don't clog during that lifespan, according to him.An oil filter that has a high efficiency based on the ISO 4548-12 efficiency test will actually retain already captured debris much better than a low efficiency oil filter. That is because if it was sloughing off already captured debris, by definition of the ISO efficiency it couldn't come out of that ISO test with high efficiency.
Example was the OG Ultra. It came out so well in Ascent's ISO test because it had high efficiency media, and it also retained already captured debris very well ... it lost very little efficiency as the dP increased as it went from new to fully loaded in the ISO test. Whereas, both the Boss and XP lost a whole bunch of efficiency as they went from new to fully loaded. So the key is to run a filter that has a high ISO 4548-12 efficiency and also has a relatively high holding capacity (up to miles use) rating.
He obviously doesn't realize, nor has seen any ISO 4548-12 test data like Ascent did showing that an oil filter certainly can have both high efficiency and high holding capacity (up to miles use raring). And on top of that, good flow, meaning low dP vs flow. Again, the OG Fram is a good example. Fram rates the new version the same, so no reason to say they are making false claims without proof. The Boss and XP are also advertised as high mileage filters, but their efficiency is low. Sure, they take longer to clog, because half of what they capture can't be retained - along the line of LSJr's claim. But not all filters have that kind of performance. Running a low efficiency oil filter for a long OCI is going in the wrong direction.Your last sentence goes against Lake Speed Jr.'s thoughts that the higher the mileage rating, the lower the efficiency. Filters that are built to last longer are less efficient so they don't clog during that lifespan, according to him.
If it says dual-layer media, it might still have wire backed media. Fram wouldn't rate it for up to 20K miles if it clogs too fast. If it clogged too fast, it would be rated for up to 3K-5K miles instead. If your engine is pretty clean running, and you use it to half its rated mileage then not anything to worry about since you wouldn't be pushing it to the limit.I have a new XG filter here, the box printed in 8/24, that says "Dual layered synthetic media provides over 99% dirt trapping efficiency*" The asterisk leads to: "FRAM group testing of filter capacity and efficiency of XG8A, XG3387A & XG4967 under ISO4548-12 for particles greater than 20 microns". The filter inside has a date code of A42823 (Oct. 9, 2024). So "dual layered synthetic material" can be construed as full synthetic? I can barely see inside the louvers in the center tube, the media that I can see looks light brown (as in cellulose). No wire backing that I could see. So by virtue of ISO4548-12, this filter will maintain its dirt holding ability for 20k? I've always been warned against running a high efficiency filter a long time due to clogging possibilities. Of course I would never run it that far, I'd be hard pressed to run it over 5k.
I'm aware of the flashlight testing of the Champion made Amsoil, RP, & FE products, I have tested a current XG a few months ago with no light leakage, so I'm confident these are not leakers.
Thanks Zee!!