So I have been trying to do a little research with oil filters and I came across the ford promo video/information video on the building of their filters. The advertising for the USCAR-36 requirements. The one thing that sort of stuck out to me was they showed how they redesigned the bypass valve in the filter so that it doesn't touch the dirty side of the filter media. While this sounds excellent in theory, it makes me wonder how on earth it's done.
In a typical filter, the bypass valve is at the end opposite of where the filter contacts the enginer. When pressure builds up in the filter so much that the oil cannot go through the filter, then the bypass valve opens. So how does the bypass valve get enough pressure in the newish designed motorcraft oil filter if it isn't building up pressure against the filter media? Wouldn't this technically create a situation where the filter media is always bypassed? Obviously, this isn't the case or it wouldn't work. However, it still begs the question how the pressure gets built-up if the filter media isn't contacted.
In a typical filter, the bypass valve is at the end opposite of where the filter contacts the enginer. When pressure builds up in the filter so much that the oil cannot go through the filter, then the bypass valve opens. So how does the bypass valve get enough pressure in the newish designed motorcraft oil filter if it isn't building up pressure against the filter media? Wouldn't this technically create a situation where the filter media is always bypassed? Obviously, this isn't the case or it wouldn't work. However, it still begs the question how the pressure gets built-up if the filter media isn't contacted.