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The importance of using a paper air filter

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The Importance of Using a Paper Air Filter
(cut and paste from latest Cummins "Turbo Diesel News")

Maintaining a clean air filter is very important for the life of your engine. What does dust do to an engine? Let’s follow the air as it enters the intake. First, the turbo gets hit with the dust – the blades are spinning as fast as 150,000 rpm, and hitting just a small amount of dust at that speed can actually remove material from the turbo blades. Next, the piston rings and engine bore take a beating because the dust acts as an abrasive material, wearing away those two sliding surfaces. Dust can then find its way into the oil by getting past the rings against the bores of the engine. With the oil filter able to hold only so much dirt before plugging and then bypassing, eventually the rest of the engine bearings suffer.

The factory-pleated paper air filter is a critical element of the air system, and it ensures that clean air is delivered to the engine to be used during the combustion process. It is designed to balance both the flow across the filter and filtered surface area, to ensure that your engine runs at peak performance. For example, a driver who uses a particularly dusty route may have 100g of dirt ingested into his air filter. The factory filter at 99. 9 percent efficiency will have allowed 0. 1g of dirt through the filter and into the engine. An aftermarket cotton-gauze filter or oiled cotton-gauze filter on the other hand typically runs around 97 percent efficient. That 3 percent difference can have a big effect on the life of your engine.

At 97 percent efficiency, 3g equal 30 times more dirt sent through to the engine! This multiplication is true for the life of the filter – the oiled cotton-gauze filter will always let 30 times more dirt through.
Now, let’s compare and contrast your factory pleated paper air filter with some common aftermarket filters.
While cotton-gauze-style filters have a lower restriction when they are clean, there are two fundamental issues with them, the first being dust-holding capacity. Due to the thickness of the material used, these filters have very low dust-holding capacity. The way in which they hold the dust means they plug up quickly, and just a small amount of dust makes the restriction increase substantially.

However, the biggest issue with cotton-gauze filters is their filtration efficiency. As mentioned earlier, restriction is based on a combination of the filtration level and the surface area. The surface area of aftermarket filters is typically much smaller than that of the standard filters, so they manage to offer lower restriction on a clean filter by having much bigger gaps in the material, leading to much lower filtration efficiency.

Oiled cotton-gauze filters are generally cleaned and re-oiled at certain mileage intervals. However, the oil used in these filters is hard on the mass air flow (MAF) sensor and surrounding components. The oil tends to come off these filters as a fine mist and coat the intake systems. This leads to incorrect readings from the already-sensitive MAF sensor.

While all diesel engines are vulnerable to dust, using the recommended factory pleated paper air filter does the best job protecting your engine while balancing flow and restriction. The paper material leads to higher filtration efficiency, which will ultimately lead to a cleaner, stronger Cummins Turbo Diesel.
 
I bought my air filter from Geno's and changed it at 15K along with the fuel filter. I could have gone longer, computer did not say to change but 15K is easy to remember and it won't hurt.

Blackstone said silicon was 8, test was done just before air filter change. A lot of the miles were driven in the Palm Springs where it is dusty at times.
 
I bought an air filter from geno's and it colapsted it got sucked up in to the intake tube. So i was running with no filter at all for i dont know how long. I Called Genos and they replaced it with no tuouble. it happen to me twice. has any one every had that happen to them ?
 
I bought an air filter from geno's and it colapsted it got sucked up in to the intake tube. So i was running with no filter at all for i dont know how long. I Called Genos and they replaced it with no tuouble. it happen to me twice. has any one every had that happen to them ?
 
I bought an air filter from geno's and it colapsted it got sucked up in to the intake tube. So i was running with no filter at all for i dont know how long. I Called Genos and they replaced it with no tuouble. it happen to me twice. has any one every had that happen to them ?

I see you plow snow. . any chance you got your filter wet and got sucked in then?
 
I don't plow snow but it has never happened to me with three different Rams, ten years, and approaching 700,000 combined miles.
 
I have seen quite a few collapsed oem air filters, in every case except one they all had gotten wet from snow. The one exception was a truck used by a journalist who used his 550 HP ram in the deserts here and in Mexico on a regular basis but did not service it very well
 
A turbocharged diesel can suck in a phone book under the right situation that little piece of mesh will not save a restricted element.
 
I usually use the fleetguard filter from genos but the last one I got from the dealer. It was an expensive piece of garbage made in china, it would set off the service filter alarm when towing with only a few hundred miles on it. I went back to the fleetguard from genos and everything is fine again.
 
I recall reading that Mopar filters have been upgraded. They are twice the cost at Genos and appear to have deeper media.

Fleetguard AF26106 Air Filter - '03-'07.jpg


MOPAR 53034249 Air Filter - '03-'07.jpg
 
The oem filter does not come from china!
Why would you buy an aftermarket filter from a dealer?

I bought a Mopar filter with a Mopar part number on it from a Chrysler dealer which said made in china right on the filter. I was not happy with it, especially paying the premium price but the truck was already yelling at me to change the filter and I was there picking up a battery for my wife's jeep. I wasn't happy about it but figured it would work for a little while, at least until I ordered from genos again.
 
I bought a Mopar filter with a Mopar part number on it from a Chrysler dealer which said made in china right on the filter. I was not happy with it, especially paying the premium price but the truck was already yelling at me to change the filter and I was there picking up a battery for my wife's jeep. I wasn't happy about it but figured it would work for a little while, at least until I ordered from genos again.
More and more stuff is being made in China. The jobs used to be in US and elsewhere of course. It's no longer a case of having a choice, many items are not made in USA anymore. Because it's made in China does not automatically mean poor quality. The plant management, R&D, materials, and quality control are often driven by Americans or Europeans either living in China or who visit the plants regularly. In most cases we ship processed and raw materials from US for assembly in China. End of day, the proof is in performance. Forums like this one are good for that. If anyone has examples of poor performance of genuine Mopar filters, made in China or not, I'd like to see it. I buy USA when I can but I'll give them a try in any case.
 
The 6. 7 oem air filters are nothing like the after market Chinese filters. Many of them trip codes on the 2010 and newer. I have not noticed the made in china on a 6,7 oem's yet. Guess I will have to go through a few more boxes
 
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Thanks Bob I sometimes wonder about my stock box with the thick element in it. We have dust most everyplace our drive is dirt/stone the roads are cinderd all winter then dusty in the summer until the rains. Just dont know what to use really with stock HP.
 
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