This was an accidental post. Please disregard.
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I agree that bypass filters are the best, if you can afford it and justify the expense. My 2 Filtermag only cost me $112 with free shipping. I didn't want to spend more.This raises an interesting comparison. Bypass v. Magnet.
Magnet should catch undissolved ferrous debris of a certain size range (?u) and above that comes near enough to the magnet.
A bypass filter should catch ALL debris, 2-3um and larger IF the lubricant passes through the filter. Again, does this make sense for the average passenger car owned 6-8 years? Probably not.
Magnets are cool and great and - yes I am opposed to some lousy magnet that loses flux at 250°F stuck in a filter center tube and may heaven forbid move (yes these are sold!), or a weak magnet on the outside of a steel can (yes these are sold as well) - but otherwise yes, I like GOOD magnets! Especially in a new engine.
My only question is about "undissolved" ferrous debris. Does the rest actually "dissolve" in the oil?Magnet should catch undissolved ferrous debris
Kinda sorta, as in the the particles small enough for most equipment used for UOAs to detect. How much is actually in classical solution, tiny.My only question is about "undissolved" ferrous debris. Does the rest actually "dissolve" in the oil?Just razzin' ya Pablo.
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All that ferrous wear debris is suspended in the oil as it's worn off the moving parts. I don't think any of it dissolves (as in the technical meaning) in the oil and becomes smaller. I'd say most of it is 5u and smaller, so that should be detectable in a standard Blackstone type UOA. There certainly could also be some of that ferrous debris between 5u and 20u. Most of the ferrous debris a magnet catches is the stuff the filters can't catch well ... especially if the filter is lower efficiency.Kinda sorta, as in the the particles small enough for most equipment used for UOAs to detect. How much is actually in classical solution, tiny.
Agree.All that ferrous wear debris is suspended in the oil as it's worn off the moving parts. I don't think any of it dissolves (as in the technical meaning) in the oil and becomes smaller. I'd say most of it is 5u and smaller, so that should be detectable in a standard Blackstone type UOA. There certainly could also be some of that ferrous debris between 5u and 20u. Most of the ferrous debris a magnet catches is the stuff the filters can't catch well ... especially if the filter is lower efficiency.
Re: bold sentence. Yes, I've commented a few times in various threads that a standard UOA can only see debris 5u and lower - like looking through a drinking straw and trying to get a total view of the world. Many times people will see a lot of metallic debris in the oil filter ... may not all be ferrous though. But then they will say the UOA still "looks pretty good" ... might be a slight uptick in wear metals but nothing that might raise a red flag. Since the UOA can only see 5u and less, it takes a large wear event to make the wear metals on a UOA to get into red flag territory.Agree.
Why I hedged, is chelation. Some Fe, Cu, other metals can be chelated by a few select additives and even some esters. Technically these atoms/ions would be in the (oil) solution. There has been recent discussion on this regarding relatively higher Cu in a UOA. Full circle to what is detected in UOA's, how a UOA could have low metal PPM yet metal caught in the filter (very worrisome), or a UOA could have an elevated metal, nothing of significance caught by even the best filter (somewhat less worrisome).
Yes, I use them as a diagnostic tool too ... mostly after the engine is totally broken in. If the level of captured ferrous debris noticeably changes over the same OCI, then it's a possible issue brewing. I take photos of the drain plugs at every oil change, so I have a record of the debris level as the engine racks up miles. I also have magnetic drain plugs in my motorcycles for that same reason, but with them there's still the transmission in the sump that can wear more (harsh use item) than the engine components, so the magnet is constantly catching transmission wear.And back to magnets, these could serve not only as Fe wear metal catchers as well as diagnostic tools.
Things aren't free, so it sounds like a break-even proposition. Could go two ways.
a) If, Filtermag captures particles the filter would have already captured. Then the argument is that it may not have a financial breakeven, if it isn't making meaningful impact to oil cleanliness.
b) If, Filtermag captures particles the filter wouldn't have already captured. Then the math will be if that reduction is enough to justify the financial cost. How much was engine life extended? Am I better off using that money towards buying a bypass filtration system or more frequent OCI instead?