Just like many opinions here, neither side will sway the other. I tend to lean towards common sense.I have not heard any good argument why filter needs to be changed every time, seems more of a personal preference.
Have you ever cut them open?The oil filter on my vehicle (GM 3400 engine) is already pretty small, so I would never do this in this particular vehicle.
That would be good for the environment and good for your wallet.Just thinking out loud. As a retired engineer, if an auto manufacturer has a recommended OC every 10-11 k miles, what's the wrong with changing the oil every 4-5k miles but continue using the filter until the next change? That's well within a "single" OC interval, and assuming you remove the old oil in the filter at the OC.
If you are using a top of the line filter a change every 5,000 miles is a money flush. JMHO!its just hard to believe one is oil change obsessed or OCD and not complete the oil change with replacing the filter at each interval.
No.Have you ever cut them open?
I think that some vehicles the filter is tough to get to.......or at least it is not terribly easy. My LX570 has I think 8 bolts to remove a large steel skid plate, then the filter. I have thought about running a 10k on the filter, and 5k oil changes."why?"
Deere?I'm fortunate enough to have a front row seat to some of the amazing progress in filter media advancement by nature of the job I do. Now I work primarily with diesel fuel filters, but the media and such a essentially the same for oil, just slightly coarser.
ON media advancements alone, the same fuel filters that used to limp to 500 hours of service are now making it to 1250-1500 hours and beyond-- in the exact same cans. And they do this with no decrease in filter efficiency.
On the lube side, our T4 spin on filters use a nominally 20 micron media vs the 30 micron of the T2 and earlier lube filter. This, despite calls for ever-longer filter service intervals. The advancements in media make it possible.
Modern nanofiber media does not lose efficiency over time like prior generations of media can, so they filter as well as new even when nearing the end of life.
In other words, the filter isn't used up until its in bypass for anything but the coldest start.
The big Red C. I'm a fuel system engineer.Deere?
Ahhhh, then we now have two people from Cummins (though I guess Fleetguard is now a majority owned subsidiary since the spin-off). @NashNative works at Fleetguard.The big Red C. I'm a fuel system engineer.
Fairly certain the Heavy Duty and Industrial sector which often these areas are run by very technical people which can probably see though the typical marketing BS that both Donaldson & Fleetguard sales and contracts would have to be handled by a sales engineer.Yes, Fleetguard and Donaldson are playing in a very different sandbox from First Brands and Mann-Hummel
And....the oil drains out of the housing. Unlike a spin on filter, the amount of old oil is less than what's left pooling around in the engine. I don't see a downside to this with the Pentastar and some other cartridge applications.I do this on my Caravan with Pentastar....2x yearly oil changes around 3K, each, changing the filter every other oil change. I want to minimize the times I tighten and loosen the plastic filter housing cap, knowing these **** things can break and leak.
Please keep talking.I'm fortunate enough to have a front row seat to some of the amazing progress in filter media advancement by nature of the job I do. Now I work primarily with diesel fuel filters, but the media and such a essentially the same for oil, just slightly coarser.
ON media advancements alone, the same fuel filters that used to limp to 500 hours of service are now making it to 1250-1500 hours and beyond-- in the exact same cans. And they do this with no decrease in filter efficiency.
On the lube side, our T4 spin on filters use a nominally 20 micron media vs the 30 micron of the T2 and earlier lube filter. This, despite calls for ever-longer filter service intervals. The advancements in media make it possible.
Modern nanofiber media does not lose efficiency over time like prior generations of media can, so they filter as well as new even when nearing the end of life.
In other words, the filter isn't used up until its in bypass for anything but the coldest start.
I'm pretty sure you are the first person to ever tell me that.Please keep talking.
Some of my stuff has multiple oil filters, at $30-60 each.Nothing...it's fine. Question is you are spending time under the car $10 or less and a few more minutes for a fresh filter is why most say "why?".