PurolatorOne PL14615 Bypass Valve and Cold Flow Tests

twX

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I've had a PurolatorOne PL14615 filter on my 2015 Subaru WRX for the past 6,600 km. I decided to change it early. Ever since installing it, it seemed that it took longer for the oil pressure light to turn off during cold starts compared to the previous OG Fram Ultra. Also, on chilly mornings (<10°C), the oil pressure light would sometimes flicker back on for a brief moment after it had turned off.

Before removing the Purolator, I decided to measure how long the oil light took to shut off after a cold start, so that I could compare it to its replacement, a Pentius PLXL7317. I measured the time between first movement of the tachometer to when the oil pressure light shut off. Here are the results:

PurolatorOne PL14615: 0.88 seconds, 20.5 engine revolutions (11°C oil, >24 hours since last engine start)

Pentius PLXL7317: 0.32 seconds, 4.9 engine revolutions (7°C oil, >24 hours since last start)
Pentius PLXL7317: 0.28 seconds, 3.9 engine revolutions (22°C oil, 6 hours since last start)
Pentius PLXL7317: 0.20 seconds, 2.3 engine revolutions (40°C oil, 0.5 hours since last start, the first start after installing the filter, did not pre-fill the filter)

OG Fram Ultra XG3593A: From memory, the light would shut off just as the engine hit 1700-1800 cold idle rpm, which would equate to around 10 engine revolutions.

I expected that the Pentius would do better, since it has around twice as much media, but I didn't expect such a noticable improvement. I suspected the Purolator was too restrictive, and that maybe its spiral spring bypass design didn't perform that well either, so I cut it open to do some forensics. It didn't have any obvious defects, and the filter media was still really clean.

Bypass Valve:

I measured how much the bypass valve opened at various pressures by putting various weights on the centre of the spring. I recorded this on video so I could measure the valve movement from video stills afterwards. There was a very slight opening at 30 psi. I'd estimate the cracking pressure to be between 28 and 30 psi. Purolator rates it at 20-30 psi.

Bypass Measurements.webp


I did some pressure drop calculations based on the size of the opening to estimate the flow rate of oil through the valve at these pressures (with warm oil). On this engine, if the filter was clogged, it seems that the bypass valve dP would reach around 38 psi, and the oil flow rate at high rpm would drop from the nominal 16 GPM that this oil pump can flow, to around 11-12 GPM.

A pressure rise to 10 psi above the cracking pressure does not seem bad, and this bypass valve performs fine by that metric, but the cracking pressure itself is a bit too high for my liking. A lower bypass setting would be a bit safer for the engine if the filter is allowed to clog.

Filter Media:

According to the Purolator datasheets, this filter should have 593 cm^2 of media area, which isn't a whole lot. I measured the useful media area to be only 520 cm^2. The OEM filter for this engine has 900 cm^2, while I'd estimate the Pentius XL 7317 at 1140 cm^2.

In terms of cold flow dP, I'd expect the PL14615 to perform similarly to the Bosch 3330 that Brand Ranks tested. That filter used a similar type of media and had the same media area (but with a much lower bypass setting). It dropped 11.3 psi at 3 GPM. When the oil is this thick, the filter dP seems to increase with the square of the flow rate until the bypass valve opens, so it would hit around 45 psi at 6 GPM if the bypass didn't open (which is this engine's flow rate at cold idle rpm if it's not in pressure relief). With the bypass relieving some pressure, the maximum media dP should end up closer to 35 psi.

So, it seems that this filter could easily exceed the bypass pressure on cold starts, even with the high bypass setting. I'd estimate that the media dP of the Pentius filter would be <10 psi at 6 GPM in a cold flow test, which is under its 13 psi bypass pressure rating. The Purolator's dP would be around 25 psi higher.

I don't really understand why a ~25 psi difference in filter dP would cause such a big change in the time it takes the engine to build oil pressure downstream of the filter. The added restriction would cause the oil pump to relieve more flow, but this engine's oil pump has a relief pressure of 102 psi. 25 psi is a small enough fraction of that, that I wouldn't expect a huge flow reduction.

Filter Canister Restriction:

I measured the inlet holes on the PL14615, and did my best to measure the tiny louver holes in the centre core as well. I did some pressure drop calculations to estimate the dP at a flow rate of 60 L/min with warm oil.

The baseplate dP is 6 psi, and the centre core dP is 3.4 psi, for a total canister dP of 9.4 psi (this doesn't include the filter media). This is more restriction than any other filter I've done these dP estimates for. For comparison, total canister dP would be around 3.6 psi for the Pentius XL 7317, and 2.4 psi for the OEM Tokyo Roki.

The pressure drop across the canister wouldn't be as high in a cold start scenario where flow rates are lower, so I don't think the restrictive canister contributes very much to the Purolator's apparent poor cold flow performance, but it all adds up.

Conclusions

• Don't put a tiny oil filter on an engine with high oil flow, even if the data sheet suggests it has reasonably low dP with warm oil at a low flow rate.
• The Purolator bypass design with the spiral spring seems like it should work fine, despite not opening very far.
• The restriction of these louvered centre cores can start to become significant at high enough flow rates, especially on small filters.
• Pentius XL filters seem to be well designed. They're the only filters I'm aware of that have more media area than the OEM Tokyo Roki filters, and should work well on Subarus despite the lower bypass setting.

I might post some C&P photos when I have time.
 
I did some pressure drop calculations based on the size of the opening to estimate the flow rate of oil through the valve at these pressures (with warm oil). On this engine, if the filter was clogged, it seems that the bypass valve dP would reach around 38 psi, and the oil flow rate at high rpm would drop from the nominal 16 GPM that this oil pump can flow, to around 11-12 GPM.

A pressure rise to 10 psi above the cracking pressure does not seem bad, and this bypass valve performs fine by that metric, but the cracking pressure itself is a bit too high for my liking. A lower bypass setting would be a bit safer for the engine if the filter is allowed to clog.
Two take always: 1) Don't redline a cold engine and 2) Don't run a filter for some crazy long change interval on a dirty engine.

Bypass valves are not really designed to take 100% of the flow from the oil pump, especially at high RPM when the pump is putting out lots of flow volume. Maybe if it was specifically a "racing filter" the bypass valve would be focused on to be a better flow path if needed.
 
I did some pressure drop calculations to estimate the dP at a flow rate of 60 L/min with warm oil.

The baseplate dP is 6 psi, and the centre core dP is 3.4 psi, for a total canister dP of 9.4 psi (this doesn't include the filter media). This is more restriction than any other filter I've done these dP estimates for.
People should know that these Subarus with the insanely high pump output volume are far from the normal car on the street. 60L/min is 15.85 GPM ... and that's basically at redline RPM. With pretty cold oil, the pump will hit pressure relief way before it's putting out 15.85 GPM. The Chevy LSx V8 pump puts out about half of that. Not much to worry about unless you're driving on a race track, or some maniac on the streets, lol.

8.4 cSt ... you running xW-20? Or assuming track oil temperatures?
 
I don't really understand why a ~25 psi difference in filter dP would cause such a big change in the time it takes the engine to build oil pressure downstream of the filter.
What's the filter's mounted orientation? Could be they are leaking the oiling system down some from a leaky ADBV.
 
Bypass valves are not really designed to take 100% of the flow from the oil pump, especially at high RPM when the pump is putting out lots of flow volume. Maybe if it was specifically a "racing filter" the bypass valve would be focused on to be a better flow path if needed.
It seems like this bypass valve would do well enough even if the filter completely clogged, limiting pressure to ~120% of the cracking pressure at high rpm. It would result in nearly a 30% drop in flow and main gallery pressure, but that has more to do with the high bypass setting than the actual valve flow characteristics.

8.4 cSt ... you running xW-20? Or assuming track oil temperatures?
That's about equivalent to a shear-thinned and fuel-diluted 5W-30 at 100°C, and is about as thin as the oil gets with my driving style. It doesn't make a big difference to the dP calculations whether it's 8 cST or 15 cST, but I wanted to use worst-case conditions in terms of low oil pressure at high rpm.
 
What's the filter's mounted orientation? Could be they are leaking the oiling system down some from a leaky ADBV.
It's mounted on top of the engine, baseplate down. The Subaru FA and FB engines are known to drain some oil out of the oiling system after the engine is shut down. It's believed to be from non-gasketed connections downstream of the oil filter that allow air to slowly seep in and oil to drain out.

If the engine is started within ~30 minutes of being shut off, the oil light will turn off within a couple of revolutions before the engine even fires. Even with the new Pentius filter installed completely dry, the oil light went out very quickly, so I'm guessing that there's a much higher volume of oil than an oil filter can hold that ends up draining out of the system after letting the engine sit.

For most engines, an oil filter's cold flow performance is probably not very important, but for this engine, in a cold climate, it seems like it could be important.
 
I've had a PurolatorOne PL14615 filter on my 2015 Subaru WRX for the past 6,600 km. I decided to change it early. Ever since installing it, it seemed that it took longer for the oil pressure light to turn off during cold starts compared to the previous OG Fram Ultra. Also, on chilly mornings (<10°C), the oil pressure light would sometimes flicker back on for a brief moment after it had turned off.

Before removing the Purolator, I decided to measure how long the oil light took to shut off after a cold start, so that I could compare it to its replacement, a Pentius PLXL7317. I measured the time between first movement of the tachometer to when the oil pressure light shut off. Here are the results:

PurolatorOne PL14615: 0.88 seconds, 20.5 engine revolutions (11°C oil, >24 hours since last engine start)

Pentius PLXL7317: 0.32 seconds, 4.9 engine revolutions (7°C oil, >24 hours since last start)
Pentius PLXL7317: 0.28 seconds, 3.9 engine revolutions (22°C oil, 6 hours since last start)
Pentius PLXL7317: 0.20 seconds, 2.3 engine revolutions (40°C oil, 0.5 hours since last start, the first start after installing the filter, did not pre-fill the filter)

OG Fram Ultra XG3593A: From memory, the light would shut off just as the engine hit 1700-1800 cold idle rpm, which would equate to around 10 engine revolutions.

I expected that the Pentius would do better, since it has around twice as much media, but I didn't expect such a noticable improvement. I suspected the Purolator was too restrictive, and that maybe its spiral spring bypass design didn't perform that well either, so I cut it open to do some forensics. It didn't have any obvious defects, and the filter media was still really clean.

Bypass Valve:

I measured how much the bypass valve opened at various pressures by putting various weights on the centre of the spring. I recorded this on video so I could measure the valve movement from video stills afterwards. There was a very slight opening at 30 psi. I'd estimate the cracking pressure to be between 28 and 30 psi. Purolator rates it at 20-30 psi.

View attachment 243513

I did some pressure drop calculations based on the size of the opening to estimate the flow rate of oil through the valve at these pressures (with warm oil). On this engine, if the filter was clogged, it seems that the bypass valve dP would reach around 38 psi, and the oil flow rate at high rpm would drop from the nominal 16 GPM that this oil pump can flow, to around 11-12 GPM.

A pressure rise to 10 psi above the cracking pressure does not seem bad, and this bypass valve performs fine by that metric, but the cracking pressure itself is a bit too high for my liking. A lower bypass setting would be a bit safer for the engine if the filter is allowed to clog.

Filter Media:

According to the Purolator datasheets, this filter should have 593 cm^2 of media area, which isn't a whole lot. I measured the useful media area to be only 520 cm^2. The OEM filter for this engine has 900 cm^2, while I'd estimate the Pentius XL 7317 at 1140 cm^2.

In terms of cold flow dP, I'd expect the PL14615 to perform similarly to the Bosch 3330 that Brand Ranks tested. That filter used a similar type of media and had the same media area (but with a much lower bypass setting). It dropped 11.3 psi at 3 GPM. When the oil is this thick, the filter dP seems to increase with the square of the flow rate until the bypass valve opens, so it would hit around 45 psi at 6 GPM if the bypass didn't open (which is this engine's flow rate at cold idle rpm if it's not in pressure relief). With the bypass relieving some pressure, the maximum media dP should end up closer to 35 psi.

So, it seems that this filter could easily exceed the bypass pressure on cold starts, even with the high bypass setting. I'd estimate that the media dP of the Pentius filter would be <10 psi at 6 GPM in a cold flow test, which is under its 13 psi bypass pressure rating. The Purolator's dP would be around 25 psi higher.

I don't really understand why a ~25 psi difference in filter dP would cause such a big change in the time it takes the engine to build oil pressure downstream of the filter. The added restriction would cause the oil pump to relieve more flow, but this engine's oil pump has a relief pressure of 102 psi. 25 psi is a small enough fraction of that, that I wouldn't expect a huge flow reduction.

Filter Canister Restriction:

I measured the inlet holes on the PL14615, and did my best to measure the tiny louver holes in the centre core as well. I did some pressure drop calculations to estimate the dP at a flow rate of 60 L/min with warm oil.

The baseplate dP is 6 psi, and the centre core dP is 3.4 psi, for a total canister dP of 9.4 psi (this doesn't include the filter media). This is more restriction than any other filter I've done these dP estimates for. For comparison, total canister dP would be around 3.6 psi for the Pentius XL 7317, and 2.4 psi for the OEM Tokyo Roki.

The pressure drop across the canister wouldn't be as high in a cold start scenario where flow rates are lower, so I don't think the restrictive canister contributes very much to the Purolator's apparent poor cold flow performance, but it all adds up.

Conclusions

• Don't put a tiny oil filter on an engine with high oil flow, even if the data sheet suggests it has reasonably low dP with warm oil at a low flow rate.
• The Purolator bypass design with the spiral spring seems like it should work fine, despite not opening very far.
• The restriction of these louvered centre cores can start to become significant at high enough flow rates, especially on small filters.
• Pentius XL filters seem to be well designed. They're the only filters I'm aware of that have more media area than the OEM Tokyo Roki filters, and should work well on Subarus despite the lower bypass setting.

I might post some C&P photos when I have time.
The oil pressure shows when the air is purged through the galleries to the first big restriction as far as my simplicity knows. I think that’s the main bearing clearance and by then another gallery to the top is filled, as oil is moving fast through the small pipes.
I don’t see how you can do all those measurements like with a video and all that to .0004”?
Also I don get the various parsings of dp within the filter, as further down the line every change in gallery size changes restriction, but flow stays the same. The filter mount inside of it the galleries get smaller, then bigger, then on it goes.
The differences you describe to start up time to pressure are enormous. Like you said unless air is getting up in the filter what would be the reason for differences?
I know my neighbors 21 Forester has clatter when starting, the times I was out there, and I wouldn’t be happy with hearing it. He for sure uses dealer services although never asked him, has the bucks, car is an appliance to use.
I’ve really never noticed different oil light times with different filters, except by seasonal temperature, and oil types. Not so much oil types as viscosity. Also with length of non use, but not with different filters I can remember.
 
The oil pressure shows when the air is purged through the galleries to the first big restriction as far as my simplicity knows. I think that’s the main bearing clearance and by then another gallery to the top is filled, as oil is moving fast through the small pipes.
That's how I understand it too. On this engine the oil pressure switch is set at only 2 psi, and there's quite a lot of fairly restrictive oil gallery between the pressure switch and the bearings, so when the light goes off, the bearings won't have pressure until some time afterwards. When the oil is thick on cold starts, I'd expect 2 psi of back pressure to build up before the oil flows very far downstream from the pressure switch.

I don’t see how you can do all those measurements like with a video and all that to .0004”?
There's a lot of error in that particular measurement, since the movement was so small, but the others should be fairly accurate. The exact measurement isn't too important. The main takeaway is that the cracking pressure is 30 psi, or a bit less. The oil light test was done by counting frames from a video. Those figures should be accurate to within +-10%.

The differences you describe to start up time to pressure are enormous. Like you said unless air is getting up in the filter what would be the reason for differences?
I should note that the differences wouldn't look quite as big if I included cranking revolutions (would be ~3x more revolutions required for the Purolator filter instead of 4x). There is definitely air in the filter, and also some air in the oil galleries.

Here's what the oiling system looks like on this engine. The galleries in the timing cover are covered by plates that aren't gasketed. It's thought that air seeps into the galleries over time, and oil seeps out. The air would rise into the filter first, then the galleries would drain downward over time. I don't think the ADBV in the filter would provide any benefit.

FA20 Oiling System.webp
 
Maybe the 0w-16 they use now drains out of the oil pump faster or something. There is a company Baxter of course everyone would know here about their setup to hold oil up. The other value I see is oil light timing. I just see and gauge by memory. I think a person could gauge 1/4 sec by eye but maybe not from memory. I don’t know how you did it so precisely.
 
The other value I see is oil light timing. I just see and gauge by memory. I think a person could gauge 1/4 sec by eye but maybe not from memory. I don’t know how you did it so precisely.
The Purolator and Pentius filters were tested by analyzing video of the dash panel frame by frame.

As for the Fram, I took a video with that filter as well, but it's been lost to time.

I just found some notes in my maintenance log though. With the Fram, the light shut off between 1650 and 1700 rpm, while rpm was still rising. That would put it at around 9 engine revolutions after the tach moves. That's with the engine sitting 12 hours, and 20°C oil, conditions somewhere in between the 6h and 24h Pentius tests.

I checked some data logs from engine to see how many revolutions typically occur before the tach moves on a cold start, and it's about 2.7 revolutions. So, to update the values with the more accurate Fram result, and adding in the cranking revolutions:

Purolator PL14615: 23.2 revolutions
OG FRAM XG5393A: 11.7 revolutions
Pentius PLXL7317: 6.6 - 7.6 revolutions
 
Purolator PL14615: 23.2 revolutions
OG FRAM XG5393A: 11.7 revolutions
Pentius PLXL7317: 6.6 - 7.6 revolutions
Pentius call it the "Ultraflow", maybe for good reason.

And incidentally, another reason why I think their efficiency is not as high as claimed.
 
Pretty hard to tell what's going on due to the effect of various oil filters on cold starts after sitting over night if the system leaks oil down while the engine is shutoff.
 
Pretty hard to tell what's going on due to the effect of various oil filters on cold starts after sitting over night if the system leaks oil down while the engine is shutoff.
I'd say it makes it easier, since if the system stayed full, the difference between the filters might be too small to ever notice.

If you're wondering if the amount of oil drainage is a major uncontrolled variable, it really isn't. It all seems to happen within an hour or so after the engine is shut off. As long as the engine has sat for longer than that, the oil light goes off at the same time on every cold start. Even oil temperature makes no perceptible difference, at least within the typical range of cold start temperatures.
 
What feature of the pump might explain that? ;) ;) ;)
^^^ PD for the win. 🙂
I get that it's a PD pump, but at some point after the engine fires up, the pump will be in pressure relief, and the flow rate will be lower if the oil is thicker. It's hard to say when exactly this would happen.

With thinner oil, more of the gallery volume would have to fill up before producing enough back pressure to activate the oil pressure switch. This would counteract the effect of the higher flow rate pumping oil to the pressure switch more quickly. So the pressure switch isn't a good indicator of how much oil has flowed into the system in this case.
 
I get that it's a PD pump, but at some point after the engine fires up, the pump will be in pressure relief, and the flow rate will be lower if the oil is thicker. It's hard to say when exactly this would happen.
It can't really happen until shortly after you see oil pressure starting to register.

With thinner oil, more of the gallery volume would have to fill up before producing enough back pressure to activate the oil pressure switch. This would counteract the effect of the higher flow rate pumping oil to the pressure switch more quickly. So the pressure switch isn't a good indicator of how much oil has flowed into the system in this case.
Oil isn't really compressible (if that's what your getting at), especially at the relatively low pressures seen in an engine oiling system. The volume being moved by the pump (if not in pressure relief) will essentially be the same regardless of the viscosity.
 
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