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20th May 2014, 03:34 PM
#21
Hardcore
Originally Posted by
nissannewby
I have never had a layer of dust in the bottom of my airbox using a paper element and as above it has to go somewhere.
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Well.....you have been the first car in the convoy lots, and as you know, the last car gets soooooo much more dust, mmmm, perhaps i need to learn where im going so i can lead more often (lol)
Mine is a 4.5L and so runs a slightly different configuration air box from factory, the air box sits on a weird angle too.
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20th May 2014 03:34 PM
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20th May 2014, 04:40 PM
#22
Seeing Matt only half answered your questions I will add in your post.
Do the K&N filters come with a seperate outer dry pre filter that slips over the main oiled filter ? (like uni filters)
No the purpose of the fluted design is surface area a uni filter is a oil foam construction they work well but do suffer air flow compared to a K&N due to element surface area.
I always thought the idea of the round drum air cleaner box was for the cyclonic effect ?, as the air curculates the dirt is thrown to the outside ?
Not really its more to do with element surface area with respect to element size. There is many positives with the Donaldson one being they filter well when sized correctly to flow capacity actually down to 4 micron when air speeds are below 4 metres/sec. They are a big element so service life is very good. BUT having tested many Donaldson's on a flow bench and no dust so perfect conditions they flow very well to their stated flow capacity. But they were designed for heavy machinery in low rev or constant rev engines, they were not designed for fast flexible ever changing high revs engines. They fail quite badly at air accelerations imposed by our turbo charged high rev diesel engines which can require air flow accelerations from 50 cfm to 500+cfm in a few seconds. The Donaldson type air box can see very high restrictions when this type of accelerations happen which will severally impede your turbo to spool hence driveability which is our main aim in a modern car or 4x4. In saying that they do a lot better job at accelerations and filtration than a ZD type air box with any type of element fitted..
Using a paper filter you may find dirt/dust in the bottom of the air cleaner box, it was my un-educated impression, an "oiled" filter would "catch" swirling dust particles, rather than letting fall to the bottom like a paper filter will ?
The dust you see in the outside bottom is fine dust or dust particles fallen off the element but the amount is tiny compared to what has been collected in the flutes of the paper element, the K&N collects all particles in the core of the element against the oiled cloth median. For a good design air box you will see fine dust particles in your induction system after the element if you have any oil in the post element tubing you will see a lot of dust but for a good designed air box these particles will be smaller than 7 micron which is proven fact will do no damage to the modern engine. K&N has a oil median so you will get oil spread through out your post element induction system so this fine dust will be collected on this oil, it looks bad but these particles are less than 7 micron so no damage to your engine FACT. (many 4x4 margarine article writers have no idea including the very best of them) Now sadly our ZD airbox cannot and will not keep air accelerations air speeds below 4 meters/ sec so the dust you see inside your post element are particles well above 7 micron. I have only done one field test on a ZD air box with a sticky 30x30mm test sample in the air box elbow. These tests are damn expensive hence only one test but that test piece was a 10 minute run behind an another 4x4 on a dirt road following quite close the sticky had 11.5% of it test sticky area with particles above 7 micron and some of those particles were as large as 80 micron. So in my learned opinion the ZD airbox is total fail with a paper element.
I thought the K&Ns would actually visually clog quicker in dusty conditions because its sticky and won't let go of any dust ?
Yep you have the right idea "wont let go of any dust" that's exactly what we want. So what if you have to clean it a bit more often, but just because it looks clogged or terrible that doesn't mean it isn't doing it's job as intended. You will feel power loss when it is clogged or fuel usage increases..
I run a paper filter and a external foam snorkel pre filter, and had avoided a K&N for the above reasons, but now may be interested in a K&N main filter, after what Mat has said (thanks Mat, more crap to buy now !, lol)
Maybe you should believe your eyes and not your heart with elements. oh I forgot the TB45 airbox is only slightly better than the ZD system its flow capacity to .5 inchers of mercury is only slightly more, it still has the same issues with air speeds, lol but its a TB45 haha it may not have the ability to produce 4 metre/sec air speeds hehe
Last edited by OldMav; 20th May 2014 at 04:46 PM.
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The Following 11 Users Say Thank You to OldMav For This Useful Post:
04OFF (20th May 2014), Bloodyaussie (21st May 2014), Clunk (20th May 2014), Dave_H (5th September 2014), FNQGU (22nd May 2014), gaddy (20th May 2014), MEGOMONSTER (20th May 2014), nissannewby (20th May 2014), NoRush (24th September 2014), the evil twin (20th May 2014), Winnie (15th July 2014)
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20th May 2014, 08:05 PM
#23
Hardcore
Awesome Oldmav, thanks for taking the time to explain that better for me
Ive used K&Ns in my performance road cars for years, discussions ive heard/read, put me off the idea about them for dusty off roading , (campfire old wives tales I guess) as ive done pretty much zero testing myself, id thought what people said about not using them had made some sense at the time, the fact you have actually tested it properly in real world conditions is excellent.
Originally Posted by
OldMav
. oh I forgot the TB45 airbox is only slightly better than the ZD system its flow capacity to .5 inchers of mercury is only slightly more, it still has the same issues with air speeds, lol but its a TB45 haha it may not have the ability to produce 4 metre/sec air speeds hehe
Yes, but unlike a ZD30, at least the TB45 has a better chance of staying "together", long enough for dust ingestion to become a problem ! (haha)
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20th May 2014, 09:46 PM
#24
Also remember my comments are directed to the ZD air box and its paper element not all paper element boxes, many work very well, Paper or K&N With a properly designed box.
The K&N has had a lot of bad press over the years mainly from 4x4 margarines writers who made a judgment using their eyes and not their brain and some simple basic research.
To be very honest the K&N isn't the be all to end all they do have faults one being under oiling and over oiling which can interfere with maf sensors dramatically causing limp mode issues to but name a few.
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20th May 2014, 10:06 PM
#25
Hardcore
Originally Posted by
OldMav
To be very honest the K&N isn't the be all to end all they do have faults one being under oiling and over oiling which can interfere with maf sensors dramatically causing limp mode issues to but name a few.
So is that purely from user error over/under oiling, or from oil sag/build up at the lower part of the filter over time ?
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20th May 2014, 10:12 PM
#26
Originally Posted by
04OFF
So is that purely from user error over/under oiling, or from oil sag/build up at the lower part of the filter over time ?
User error only..
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20th May 2014, 10:37 PM
#27
The 747
Oldmav, I have the Patroldocta ZD30 style airbox on my TD42 with a K&N filter, is there a better option for me? I don't have a lot of room there with dual batteries either.
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20th May 2014, 10:44 PM
#28
Patrol God
Originally Posted by
Winnie
Oldmav, I have the Patroldocta ZD30 style airbox on my TD42 with a K&N filter, is there a better option for me? I don't have a lot of room there with dual batteries either.
Fatz fabrication may have an option.
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20th May 2014, 10:52 PM
#29
Originally Posted by
Winnie
Oldmav, I have the Patroldocta ZD30 style airbox on my TD42 with a K&N filter, is there a better option for me? I don't have a lot of room there with dual batteries either.
I have tested that particular air box option I wont write the name for obvious reasons, but they are hardly better than a ZD box, The first thing you learn with air boxes is the 30mm minimum rule for all round element clearance, Then you need some system of diffusion at the inlet point to force the air to use all the element for filtration. the FATZ or 4Bfab or any of the new panel element boxes now days are a good option which can be fitted to allow the second battery.
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21st May 2014, 09:28 AM
#30
Originally Posted by
OldMav
I have tested that particular air box option I wont write the name for obvious reasons, but they are hardly better than a ZD box, The first thing you learn with air boxes is the 30mm minimum rule for all round element clearance, Then you need some system of diffusion at the inlet point to force the air to use all the element for filtration. the FATZ or 4Bfab or any of the new panel element boxes now days are a good option which can be fitted to allow the second battery.
So what is the benefit of those air boxes??? I have thought they were a big pain in the arse as they take some time to open up to inspect or do maintenance on and have seen many a member not be bothered to open it up to inspect due to not being bothered..
Now I have a stock tb42e airbox that has had the blow by fitted for gas but I no longer run gas... is it worth putting back to stock?
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