dma251 said:
I am curious - can anyone here think of more then 1 vehicle currently in production that comes from the FACTORY (not a tuner shop) with anything BUT a paper filter? I can't think of only 1 possible vehicle, but even that is a stretch....
I'll say this much, I am a Parts Advisor at a Dodge/Chrysler/Jeep dealership and none of our vehicles come stock with a K&N or any similar filter. The 06' Viper Coupe even has dual paper filters, as does the SRT-10 Viper engine'd Ram, and my 230 HP Turbo SRT-4. Wit that said, the Mopar performance parts catalog does list several K&N style filters for various vehicles. As with everything else in the performance parts catalog, they are intended with no warranty and for use on off-road vehicles only and the warranty of a new vehicle may be voided by using them. The only literature I have ever seen about using these type filters in a Chrysler product was that it was ok for performance use, except for vehicles that fall under the need for the severe service maintenance schedule. I have used several K&N filters and similar products and have been happy with them, but on several engines I have noticed a lot more dark color to my oil when using them. I will also say that when cleaning and re-oiling to K&Ns specs, it is very normal to have an oily residue in the air cleaner and intake tubes. This was also the case on the oil "oil bath" air cleaners in use up until the mid 70s. I do like the K&N filters, but they are like performance oil filters, they sacrifice filtering ability for flow. To me on something like a Deuce, if more air is needed I'd double up on the air cleaners somehow. Perhaps a fender filter unit as mentioned before from a 5 ton or similar. A K&N will get clogged very quickly in a dusty environment, especially if the filter element is exposed like on a open air cleaner like on a muscle car V8 or on a cold air intake like on an import tuner. I know this from experience. For my 72' Charger road racer, I had two of the same element so I could rotate them while they were being cleaned because of this.
With that said, the new AEM short ram intake I bought for my 05' SRT-4 today, has a new style element that has no oil and is some sort of re-usable synthetic material. On AEMs website it compares them to a K&N oil style and lists the irregular filtering as the reason for the swap and in comparison. I'm going to install it tomorrow and see how it does.
On the synthetic oil bit, I like synthetics, but you have to be careful what you use and what you use it in. As Lee said, the NV4500s take a very special lube and not using it can be very expensive. BTW Lee, we stock about 9 different kinds of gear oil for the various transmissions, transfer cases, transfer units, and axles that Mopar is now using. Over half are synthetic and none will swap in place of each other. Bizarre, eh? My SRT-4's manual suggests using Mobil-1 full synthetic in the engine for "spirited driving" but I have seen several bulletins that reference problems found in using Purple stuff and Amsoil in different applications. I for one, don't trust Amsoil and I have never seen anyone I know use the Purple. I have had a few guys run Redline stuff with different degrees of success, usually in a 4X4 or a drag car.
Just my .02