pillen140
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2008
- Messages
- 3,263
- Age
- 39
- City
- winston-salem, NC
- Vehicle Year
- 1995
- Transmission
- Manual
Forgot to meantion, try starting a 3.0 in the middle of a new york winter with 20w50.
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Weezl, when you said "you are dumb" Idk why, but I read it in the voice of that guy that says "hide yo wife hide yo kids" lol. Tried to rep but wouldn't let me. I don't know what a pcv has to do with a k&n, I think he made a mistake but was afraid to stand corrected. Anywho, I run a k&n drop in when I am, or when I plan to go off road, it doesn't add any power! Only use it because I can wash it after it gets all nasty and clogged with dust and mud and other debris and a few times they've gotten wet. Got sick of paying $20+ dollars in air filters every time I went on a really dust trail. I use a paper filter the majority of the time. If you don't over oil a k&n, they are ok, but still not as good as a paper filter. The only thing I would change about your post is runnign without a filter is better than a k+n, because most normal people know what you mean about the oil making dirt stick, and used that to get your point across, some not so mechanically inclined run to napa without an air filter, lol I .
Hmm. All my friends that build engines swear by 20-50 also. Even during break in. They built the nasty odd fire beast the ranger below.
[IG]http://www.philofab.com/temp/almoststockranger.jpg[/IMG]
Something that needs to be mentioned is that I live in an area that reaches 130F in the summer time. Thicker oil is the way to go here.
That, and that's a race engine lol, we run 20-50 in our late models and modifieds. If your gonna run 8000-9000rpm for a couple hours in 100 degree weather, you pretty much have too
Forgot to mention, try starting a 3.0 in the middle of a new york winter with 20w50.
slightly different story, that being said though, what are your friend's actual jobs? you said "friends that build engines" that's not the same as a mechanical engineer (who designs engines) or even a mechanic who builds motors professionally...
Just gonna put my physical evidence in here....looks to me like they work beautifully.
And now for the scientific part:
http://www.bobistheoilguy.com/airfilter/airtest1.htm
I have learned that testing is a good method of screening and can provide some good information but cannot replace real world use.
My conclusion from real world usage of K&N filters is; if it passes particles, it is not enough or of the size to harm an engine unless the filter is installed incorrectly.
Harm is a subjective term which needs a definition. Paper element filters filter better while providing more than enough airflow to a stock or near stock engine.