Glenda W.
Thread starter
Here you go! Enjoy, you’ve always been grateful!I used to use the Purolator One filter PL14610 for many years. It would be interesting to know it's efficiency as well.
Here you go! Enjoy, you’ve always been grateful!I used to use the Purolator One filter PL14610 for many years. It would be interesting to know it's efficiency as well.
if you aren’t after efficiency but rather build quality minus louver issues, the boss is actually a pretty stout filter. but i agree, this should be marketed towards a “racing” filter application depending on flow ratings on the media. thank goodness i have a stock pile of OG ultra/titanium’s and CQ premiums can be bought by the caseHow can they even call this filter a “Boss”? It’s not even an entry level employee. More like an unpaid intern![]()
Thanks for refreshing the contested pages. In the margin the date is year 2000. The Boss wasn’t out yet. Maybe in Germany where the sheet is from they had a pbl series. How in the world can this overrule a current published figure from Purolator USA?Called Purolator USA for Bill7 and my neighbor. 1995 Mustang. Also had Purlator email me their sources for those who don’t believe me.
Boss PBL 20195
99%@46 microns
50%@22 microns
View attachment 257769
So this is even after moving from the wire backed media - to media more similar to the current Fram XG … (same type of change) … ?Called Purolator USA for Bill7 and my neighbor. 1995 Mustang. Also had Purlator email me their sources for those who don’t believe me.
Boss PBL 20195
99%@46 microns
50%@22 microns
View attachment 257769
Thank you for always going the extra mile and providing the forum with so much info. It's greatly appreciated. You're a member of the small # of respected subject matter experts on this forum.Called Purolator USA for Bill7 and my neighbor. 1995 Mustang. Also had Purlator email me their sources for those who don’t believe me.
Boss PBL 20195
99%@46 microns
50%@22 microns
View attachment 257769
Looks like their Tech Line people are referencing the Spec Sheets. Of course some here will claim they are wrong and the company that designs and makes them don't know what they're talking about, lol.I just called Purolator Tech Service after no response to my email.
The Boss PBL 14615 for my 2018 Outback is 99%@46 microns and 50%@22 microns.
The Spec Sheets over-ride the false footnote. You think the Purolator Tech Line is randomly pulling specs out of the air? The Spec Sheet for the PBL30001 does not match the website footnote - not even close.99%@20 on their website, which is the source everyone uses for other filters official efficiency. Suddenly, website is no good. That’s in writing, dated 2024. Not on the phone, not in an email. Where the reliance is on the particular phone answerer.
They can't be all correct, especially when the same exact filter model shows differently efficiency from different references.There seems to be a big argument on this forum about which efficiency results are correct for the Purolator Boss. It seems to me that it is most likely that all of the results are correct.
The Purolator Tech Dept and their official Spec Sheets say otherwise. Call Purolator, point out and ask them why there's a descrepency.
The note on the bottom of the page says "Print: 6.11.2023". Unless this is an old image being recycled from this thread where @fantastic posted the same spec sheet (which I would assume isn't the case, given that @Glenda W. noted they had Purolator e-mail them the spec sheet), one would assume that would be the date of the doc.Thanks for refreshing the contested pages. In the margin the date is year 2000. The Boss wasn’t out yet.
I think it says May 2000.
Already mentioned that it's most likely the copyright date of the raw form, not the info in the form. Why would Purolator and M+H not know what they are talking about? It's their filters and they have specific Spec Sheets, so they better know what they're talking about.Thanks for refreshing the contested pages. In the margin the date is year 2000. The Boss wasn’t out yet. Maybe in Germany where the sheet is from they had a pbl series. How in the world can this overrule a current published figure from Purolator USA?
But the credibility of the Purolator USA web page claims is supported by the 1-year-old BR test results, but obviously not by the almost 4-year-old Ascend results or the who-knows-how-old measurements on the H+M GMBH Germany spec sheets. It's an unsolved mystery ...They can't be all correct, especially when the same exact filter model shows differently efficiency from different references.
The whole BR "efficiency ranking" is a whole other rabbit hole. One theory on the BR testing is that the Boss ranked up near the top because the other filters tested had leaky leaf springs (shown here all over the place) which deceased their efficiency down toward the less efficient Boss.But the credibility of the Purolator USA web page claims is supported by the 1-year-old BR test results, but obviously not by the almost 4-year-old Ascend results or the who-knows-how-old measurements on the H+M GMBH Germany spec sheets. It's an unsolved mystery ...
Correct me if I’m wrong, but aren’t Brand Ranks not ISO certified?But the credibility of the Purolator USA web page claims is supported by the 1-year-old BR test results, but obviously not by the almost 4-year-old Ascend results or the who-knows-how-old measurements on the H+M GMBH Germany spec sheets. It's an unsolved mystery ...
No way. They used ISO test dust and tried to reflect some aspects of the ISO 4548-12 test procedure - like using the same test viscosity and terminating the test at a set dP level. But they are simply using a particle count and not real time calibrated high cost particle counters up steam and down stream like an official ISO 4548-12 efficiency test, like Ascent used.Correct me if I’m wrong, but aren’t Brand Ranks not ISO certified?