What does OG ultra mean - original generation?
Thanks for the post as well!
OC = Ocean Grown

What does OG ultra mean - original generation?
Thanks for the post as well!
Just as long as you are not including the 3.3l V6 in that comment (introduce in '90-'10) as those engines were pretty durable and didn't have oil burning issues. The vans that died early were due to the A604 being a poor design.Wasn’t referring to the V8s, mainly all of the 4s and 6s from mid-80s to the end of the Neons. Maybe it’s different where I live, people don’t appear to take care of them? All I know is that following most of the 4-cyl ChryCos during that timeframe was harder to breathe than following the mosquito truck, and there were fewer mosquitos behind those cars!![]()
But the numbers FRAM published for the old Ultra and the new Ultra don't in any way match the actual tested performance of the old Ultra. Colour me skeptical on their claim that the cheaper to manufacture filter with the cellulose blend media is "better".So from the graph's that Overkill and ZeeOSix posted, it appears that the even the updated Fram Ultra is still the most efficient oil filter for passenger cars? The graps show Fram Ultra is 99.8% efficiency @ 15 micros from that test that was done.
Fram also says that the "updated" (aka cheapened) Fram Ultra has higher efficiency that the wire backed older OG version that was such a darling on BITOG.
Thanks for raising that valid concern.But the numbers FRAM published for the old Ultra and the new Ultra don't in any way match the actual tested performance of the old Ultra. Colour me skeptical on their claim that the cheaper to manufacture filter with the cellulose blend media is "better".
Yes, there's a synthetic "topper" layer on top of a cellulose blend backer layer, giving you two layers.Thanks for raising that valid concern.
I was under the impression that the updated (cheapened) Fram Ultra uses a synthetic media which is bonded to a cellulose media.
The cellulose blend media is probably the same or similar to the TG media. This achieved two things:The cellulose media's main purpose is to firm up and support the synthetic media.
Well, there were 4 layers in the wired backed media. Two layers of 2-ply synthetic media. The screen wasn't there to provide any filtration, just to provide the rigidity needed for the structure/integrity the depth filtration synthetic media doesn't have.An added benefit was the cellulose "extra" media also can do more filtering that the wire backing that it replaced (obviously since the wire backing can't do any filtering at all). That is how a BITOG post where someone had a chat with Fram Customer service described it.
The cellulose is the back layer, the synthetic "topper" is the front layer.I read your posts on oil filter media types. Very good reading.
Am I correct in assuming the updated (cheapened) Fram Ultra uses a synthetic media which is bonded to a cellulose media,
or is it a synthetic media bonded to a synthetic blend media?
Fram bases their efficiency claim on the avg of two different filter model sizes. IIRC, it was based on 3 filters in the past. The overall ISO efficiency rating of an oil filter is the avg of the starting vs ending efficiency per the ISO test procedure. Takes into account the debris holding factor under increased delta-p near the end of the test when some filters become less efficient. In this example, the avg overall efficiency would be (90+60)÷2 = 75% @ 20μ. A filter needs to be efficient, and also be able to hold already captured debris very well to have an ISO efficiency rating of 99% @ 20μ.But the numbers FRAM published for the old Ultra and the new Ultra don't in any way match the actual tested performance of the old Ultra. Colour me skeptical on their claim that the cheaper to manufacture filter with the cellulose blend media is "better".
Yep, you and I discussed this before, I'm still bothered by the inaccuracies in the communication from FRAM if it isn't obvious, lol.Fram bases their efficiency claim on the avg of two different filter model sizes. IIRC, it was based on 3 filters in the past. The overall ISO efficiency rating of an oil filter is the avg of the starting vs ending efficiency per the ISO test procedure.
Well, I've been trying to get a group buy going for this for a while, lol, as I am sure you recall. I wanted to get the EaO tested too, along with the new Ultra.Only way to fully compare would be for an ISO lab to test the old vs new Ultra back to back in the same lab, by the same operator, with the same equipment and procedures and settings. Bring $$$.![]()
Yea that is a good way to lose thousands of customers by taking away one of their best selling line of filters and also dropping below the competition.Given the number of GDI, TGDI, and TMPI engines out these these days and that almost none (read this none) could go to a 20K OCI, I now question why the Ultra and Extra Guard are still around.
If FRAM is intent on cutting production cost/increasing production efficiency, they could kill the UG and EG and march forward with just the Tough Guard.
Though time may paint a different picture, color me unimpressed with the new UG.
Where are you a big user in the past?Yea that is a good way to lose thousands of customers by taking away one of their best selling line of filters and also dropping below the competition.
Was I a big user of FRAM in the past? no, there was a few times FRAM's were used on my vehicles but it was never a consistent thing.Where are you a big user in the past?
The mileage rating Fram uses is their way of showing and comparing the holding capacity of the different models (EG, PH, XG). On a side note, it may be possible for a Honda with it's OLM and "A/B" filter schedule to get close to a 20K oil filter change.Given the number of GDI, TGDI, and TMPI engines out these these days and that almost none (read this none) could go to a 20K OCI, I now question why the Ultra and Extra Guard are still around.
If FRAM is intent on cutting production cost/increasing production efficiency, they could kill the UG and EG and march forward with just the Tough Guard.
Though time may paint a different picture, color me unimpressed with the new UG.
I believe it was ETCG who did a 20k interval on a Odyssey and it turned out fine. I personally am against extended intervals but people do it so there is a market for it.The mileage rating Fram uses is their way of showing and comparing the holding capacity of the different models (EG, PH, XG). On a side note, it may be possible for a Honda with it's OLM and "A/B" filter schedule to get clise to a 20K oil filter change.
Have you ever used them? If not, keep scrolling...Yea that is a good way to lose thousands of customers by taking away one of their best selling line of filters and also dropping below the competition.
I totally get that however, that's akin to using a 12 ft ladder to get out of a 6 ft hole.The mileage rating Fram uses is their way of showing and comparing the holding capacity of the different models (EG, PH, XG). On a side note, it may be possible for a Honda with it's OLM and "A/B" filter schedule to get close to a 20K oil filter change.
One guys opinion ... others like the headroom. If you think it's a waste, then don't use them. If people like to go overkill, then that's fine by me ... I'm not paying for it.I have ran FRAM Ultra's to 15K and beyond but very few people do that--even the most of diehards here have not. With the engine designs today, the engine itself typically will not allow an run that long before the oil is required to be changed. Therefore, FRAM Ultra's in the grand scheme of things is mostly an unused resource.
Not a point of contention for me, just pointing out the obvious. For 99.999999999% of people (me included at this point), a 10K filter provides more than enough headroom for gasoline engines.One guys opinion ... others like the headroom. If you think it's a waste, then don't use them. If people like to go overkill, then that's fine by me ... I'm not paying for it.![]()
I will scroll however the hell I want to scroll.Have you ever used them? If not, keep scrolling...
Maybe some guys like running (and do run) an Ultra for two 10K OCIs, or three 6-7K OCIs, or four 5K OCIs ... more than one way to use an oil filter to it's max potential. Cuts the cost per OCI of the filter down too.Not a point of contention for me, just pointing out the obvious. For 99.999999999% of people (me included at this point), a 10K filter provides more than enough headroom for gasoline engines.