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Posted

My air filter indicator finally got down to 15% so I swapped air filters.Ā  Surprisingly, the filter looked to be in really good shape and I cant help but wonder if the paper-like accordion section of the filter element lasted considerably longer than typical because of the fibrous mesh screen attached.Ā  This is the first time I have seen the fibrous mesh screen attached to a filter before, is this something relatively new or have vehicle manufacturers been using this for a while?

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Posted (edited)

84121219_Primary.jpg

Been like this for some time.Ā  Ā 

Mine was grungy at 25,000 miles, had lots of bugs.Ā 

OEM filter was made in Canada and truck was made in Mexico.

Ā 84121217_Primary.jpg

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Edited by elcamino
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Posted

No excuse or reasoning will justify 96k.Ā 

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Posted

I love when people sound off on their absolutes. I can only give my experiences. My replacements oil bath filters would last the life of my vehicles. My filter in my 92 Chevy was in the entire 12 years I had it. My wife’s Acura at 22 years old has had every fluid replaced at least once at the dealer. They pull and inspect the air filter. It’s original. I never thought about it, now I will. There’s people, I’m one. That rarely see bad roads or dirty environments. My wife’s Genesis a 2011 at 125k miles has had one air and cabin filter and no alignment. You can’t paint everyone with the same brush.Ā 

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Posted

I am constantly learning new things and to do that I have to let go of some 'absolutes' as painful as that may be. Embarrassing sometimes. But I'd prefer embarrassment to failing to learn and suffering the consequences that route follows.Ā 

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@GanglyĀ mentioned his discussion was based on 'instrumentation'. To @KARNUT's point, conditions do vary. A simple milage program may be effective is absences of evidence but when you have the facts in front of you.... IMHO every filter on the powertrain should have a pressure differential instrument.Ā 

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I over maintain. Mostly because the vehicle lacks proper instruments. I change that filter every 25K BUT most of the time it looks, passes the light and visual tests I could have gone longer and would have IF I had the instruments to base that decision on.

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Posted
1 hour ago, diyer2 said:

No excuse or reasoning will justify 96k.Ā 

GM's engineers found it acceptable, that would be one excuse. :)

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Posted

No matter what I say there will be a rebuttal. I stand by my original post.

Ā 

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Posted
14 minutes ago, Grumpy Bear said:

I am constantly learning new things and to do that I have to let go of some 'absolutes' as painful as that may be. Embarrassing sometimes. But I'd prefer embarrassment to failing to learn and suffering the consequences that route follows.Ā 

Ā 

@GanglyĀ mentioned his discussion was based on 'instrumentation'. To @KARNUT's point, conditions do vary. A simple milage program may be effective is absences of evidence but when you have the facts in front of you.... IMHO every filter on the powertrain should have a pressure differential instrument.Ā 

Ā 

I over maintain. Mostly because the vehicle lacks proper instruments. I change that filter every 25K BUT most of the time it looks, passes the light and visual tests I could have gone longer and would have IF I had the instruments to base that decision on.

Ā 

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I agree Grumpy.Ā 

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Had I not had the information presented to me on the instrument cluster I would have changed it much sooner, typically between 25k-50K.Ā  I wish I would have taken a photograph of the removed filter since it appeared to be in remarkably good shape for being 3 years old.Ā  Possibly bisecting it for analysis could have provided some insight into the wear characteristics.Ā  Seeing how 95 percent of my miles are highway miles through Texas, I canĀ kinda understand why the filter looked as good as it did, but I followed the maintenance reminder regardless.Ā  If a majority of the trucks usage was off road, or if I lived in a "dirt road" area, I imagine the filter element would have required changing MUCH sooner.

Ā 

Its interesting how the type of mileage is much more important than the number of miles regarding some components.Ā  For example, with 96k miles I still have over 50% on my front brake pads and over 70% on my rear, while other individuals on here complain of burning up pads in 20k miles.Ā Ā 

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Posted
3 minutes ago, diyer2 said:

No matter what I say there will be a rebuttal. I stand by my original post.

Ā 

I understand, I am the same way with other aspects of vehicle ownership :)

Posted
51 minutes ago, Gangly said:

Ā 

I agree Grumpy.Ā 

Ā 

Had I not had the information presented to me on the instrument cluster I would have changed it much sooner, typically between 25k-50K.Ā  I wish I would have taken a photograph of the removed filter since it appeared to be in remarkably good shape for being 3 years old.Ā  Possibly bisecting it for analysis could have provided some insight into the wear characteristics.Ā  Seeing how 95 percent of my miles are highway miles through Texas, I canĀ kinda understand why the filter looked as good as it did, but I followed the maintenance reminder regardless.Ā  If a majority of the trucks usage was off road, or if I lived in a "dirt road" area, I imagine the filter element would have required changing MUCH sooner.

Ā 

Its interesting how the type of mileage is much more important than the number of miles regarding some components.Ā  For example, with 96k miles I still have over 50% on my front brake pads and over 70% on my rear, while other individuals on here complain of burning up pads in 20k miles.Ā Ā 

I drove my trucks 50-60K miles a year. My BFGs generally lasted 100K miles, brakes well over, up to my 2014 oil changes at 25k miles with Amsoil. All my trucks were modified with a minimum of duals, tunes and some intake modifications. When I went off road it was on pipelines. You can’t do much of that today. I would with today’s trucks under the same circumstances follow the same maintenance. The only difference would be oil changes and transmission service. For obvious reasons.Ā 

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Posted
On 5/18/2023 at 9:33 AM, diyer2 said:

No matter what I say there will be a rebuttal. I stand by my original post.

Ā 

I agree. $24 for an air filter once a year is cheap insurance.Ā 

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