Alternative drop in air filters

Most everybody has been so pro oil and pre oil filter I've never thought to bring this up either. I've got two sho's, a 10 and 11 and been using the stock air boxes to date. I've had so many problems in the past with oil filters in my construction trucks (all Ford) that I stopped using them entirely.
I run Amsoil in everything I have and it has served me very well, including there air filters in two of my mustangs. I run the EaA221 drop in air filter. I've run 30k miles through one sho and 17k through the other. This filter is suppose to out perform paper and gauze filters in all the tests that I've seen so far and I don't see that they are wrong yet.

Just another product that you all may not be aware of. I just got tired of oil up mass airs needing to be replaced unnecessarily. Check it out people, hope it helps your sho too.
 
griggs95 said:
Most everybody has been so pro oil and pre oil filter I've never thought to bring this up either. I've got two sho's, a 10 and 11 and been using the stock air boxes to date. I've had so many problems in the past with oil filters in my construction trucks (all Ford) that I stopped using them entirely.
I run Amsoil in everything I have and it has served me very well, including there air filters in two of my mustangs. I run the EaA221 drop in air filter. I've run 30k miles through one sho and 17k through the other. This filter is suppose to out perform paper and gauze filters in all the tests that I've seen so far and I don't see that they are wrong yet.

Just another product that you all may not be aware of. I just got tired of oil up mass airs needing to be replaced unnecessarily. Check it out people, hope it helps your sho too.

that filter doesn't seem to be available anymore.  has the code changed?
 
I called Amsoil today and wanted to order an extra filter in case of discontinuation and to my surprise, that is already the case.
EaA221 is the correct number. I highly recommend trying to track one down if you can. Amsoil claims the filter is only guaranteed for 100k miles of normal driving conditions.
Wix is now the replacement part. The dealer told me that they weren't profitable for the company so that's the reason for the discontinuation :-(
 
The aFe filter listed below does not fit a 2013 SHO.  I went to their website and they don't have any listed that will fit.  I measured my stock filter and it is 12" x 6.75".  Am I missing something here?  I am looking for an oil-less filter.  Preferably a filter that is free flowing, cleanable and will fit in the OEM air box.  Thanks


SHOdded said:
    aFe Pro-Dry S Air Filters
    StyleAFE Pro-Dry S Air Filter
    Vehicle 2010 Ford Taurus
    Submodel 3.5L V6
    AutoAnything SKU3766357
    Part Number31-10215

AA15 coupon code (15% off) $44.16 shipped.
 
When I spoke to aFe they told me their oiled filters flow and filter much better than their dry ones. Hence why I just went with K&N.


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There have been tests done on other platforms showing that no filter definitely flows more than paper, by almost 200 cfm which shold be obvious. One Camaro test showed that their stock airbox WITH snorkel flows more than the box without the snorkle, and the Green filter flow rate was the closest to not having a filter.

I looked at the stock paper filter and compared it with the panel filter for the Panther platform (Marauder and Crown Vic) and the Panther has a much larger panel filter but those cars don't produce nearly as much power. The SHO shares the same panel filter as a 2007 Edge or the CX9. I never understood that other than perhaps engineering was limited in packaging space and optimized flow through pressure with the airbox and snorkle instead? I recall Big macs post about the dyno without an airbox being within 3 hp. It would be interesting to see the dyno with stock airbox but no filter vs CAI vs stock paper.

I did a lot of reading on the flow tests for various brands. The dry filters all flow barely more than the stock paper filter to the point that we might as well stick with paper (Afe, Amsoil, AEM included). The only filters to flow more than say 10% of stock were AFE oiled, K&N, S&B, and Green filter. But the other caveat is that the less pleats there are, the less dust load capacity there is, so the filters will become restricted faster. Stock paper is about 99 to 100 pleats. K&N is around 40. Green is about 35, but deeper - however other tests showed Green can clog faster Than K&N

The Green outflows K&N but I am not sure about the quality or durability of Green. They ran into supply issues and quality issues a few years back for the Corvettes. The Ganassi EcoBoost prototype and Ford GTLM cars use Green but that is meaningless as they can afford to swap out parts and have engine allocations for the year.

So it seems either stick with quality paper filter, or go with K&N or Green panel filters if more flow is desired. The dry filters may have good efficiency but the shallower and reduced pleats allow them to clog much faster without a significant increase in initial flow - might as well just stick with paper in that case.

As for intake oil contamination, that is a non-issue for EcoBoost since we are speed density and do not have MAF sensors. Also, the oil, gas vapors, and condensation spewing around in the intake tract won't mind some filter oil joining in the fun.

The first time I oiled a cotton gauze filter was the factory racing intake for my Ducati. It used a canister style round filter, but the dirty side was the inside of the canister and the clean side was the outside. The only way to oil it was to oil the pleats from the outside. I accidentally over oiled it to the point it was just dripping out of the airbox. The Ducati's Continental/Siemens ECU used Alpha-N fueling, so there wasn't a MAF sensor to worry about.
 
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