Here's a way to prove if an oil filter with debris loading at a slow rate in real use changes its efficiency.
1) Find a beater "test car" with pretty dirty engine internals. Engine has to take a spin-on oil filter.
2) Chose an oil filter that isn't real efficient that fits the engine, and has a pretty high bypass valve setting.
3) Have that specific oil filter ISO 4548-12 tested, but only with just enough debris loading to get a "new" efficiency baseline.
- This is where LRJr could do a test like this because he has connections, like at Donaldson who can do ISO testing for him, for free I bet.
4) Put that same oil filter on the beater test car.
5) Run some Valvoline Restore and Protect to get some increased debris loading on the filter. Do at lease a 5K run. Hire someone to put those miles on in a relatively short time so not waiting for a year for test results. Or find someone with a beater test car to volunteer.
6) Remove that filter and send it back to the same ISO test lab for more efficiency testing after it's been loaded in real use.
7) Does the ISO efficiency test data show the filter is less efficient after being loaded up in real use.
PS - Or after step 4), you could instead find a beater car (that you don't care about) where you can add the ISO test dust at low levels to load up the filter pretty good, but slowly over a 5K+ OCI. Or get a beater engine and put it on a test stand in the lab and run this test with ISO test dust added slowly over a simulated 5K+ OCI, to essentially load the oil filter to at least half of its capacity to see if it "gets more efficient" with increased loading. I doubt it will, I think you will see an efficiency decrease just like in the ISO 4548-12 testing.
Might be a good LSJr YT video ... you reading this Lake? I get a cut though for the test planning.
