countryroad82
Well-known member
I like K & N filters for the simple fact I can clean it. That is what I normally run in my hot rods and I do have on my personal truck. For the fleet I maintain I use Wix for everything filterwise.
i've put k&n's on my trucks until last year. after a semi dusty weekend playing around in my bronco i pulled the filter to see if it needed cleaning. it had been about 2 years since i had cleaned it. to my surprise there was DIRT in the clean side of the intake. all the way into the intake manifold. most of it wiped off with a clean finger. i can't imagine how much got into the engine. i can tell you that everything i drive got the K&N's taken out.
i've heard from the guys that get their oil checked that when using the K&N's their oil has more silicates (dirt) in it.
Fram is junk?
Man I wish I would have known that 15 years ago when I started using Fram oil and air filters exclusively on my 96 s10 2.5l 4 cylinder pickup. It has 251,000 miles on the clock and runs like a champ on the original engine. Changed the oil with old school valvoline every 3k. I guess it is probably going to puke anyday now since I have abused it so badly with Fram poducts.

I'm not trying to be a smart@ss or or cause a fight here-Just saying......
I am a ******** GM man. I always used AC filters but they have been getting hard to find around my area. Other than buying them at the dealer with for a pretty hefty price.
Basically I agree with the OP that using OEM stuff is the way I prefer to fly also.
I have heard all good about NAPA Gold filters, both oil and air. I've been using NAPA Gold's for awhile now and probably will continue.
FWIW- The NAPA filters are made by Wix. It says that right on the boxes.
That's my $.02.
Do you think a K&N is no good for a motorcycle (Harley) either.There's a dyno test on one of the LS1 forums where a guy tested an OEM paper filter, a K&N filter, and no filter at all. No change in the dyno numbers for any of them. Paper filters simply aren't restrictive for 99% of the cars on the road today.
Something to think about with K&N filters - if you only need to clean them once every 100,000 miles, where's all that dirt going? Paper filters should be changed every 15-20,000 miles, but if a K&N isn't getting dirty, logic dictates that it's letting the same dust the paper filters catch through into the engine. Which is what an air filter isn't supposed to do.
A paper filter for my car costs about $7. A K&N is something like $80, plus the recharge kit, which I think is about $15. I'll spend the $7 every other month and have a clean engine, rather than saving $10 over the course of a couple years, and ending up with a lot of nasty **** in my oil. K&N filters "saving money" falls into the same ******** category of "not being able to afford a car because it needs premium gas". Once you actually do the numbers, the arguments fall flat.
Do you think a K&N is no good for a motorcycle (Harley) either.
Some Fram oil filter designs have been known to cause oil starvation issues at start-up. The specific filter your truck uses might not be prone to that, or you might have just gotten really lucky.
Plenty of oil filters the same price that filter better without known engine-destroying problems, though.
