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intake air filter choices



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 18th 07, 01:07 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dick[_1_]
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Posts: 71
Default intake air filter choices

After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick (about
1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that others
are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick


  #2  
Old January 18th 07, 02:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
jls
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Posts: 60
Default intake air filter choices


"Dick" wrote in message
news:GiKrh.2487$jG1.88@trnddc04...
After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick

(about
1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that

others
are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick


A Brackett filter for a certified aircraft with C-85 would be about
the same thickness. You don't want to suck anything, such as a part
of the filter, up into the carburetor.

Even Bracketts have had their problems with AD's because of parts of
the filter migrating into the venturi.


  #3  
Old January 18th 07, 03:42 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Maxwell
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Posts: 1,116
Default intake air filter choices


"Dick" wrote in message
news:GiKrh.2487$jG1.88@trnddc04...
After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick
(about 1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that
others are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick


Check with the K&N filter folks. They have a lot of high performance filters
to choose from.


  #4  
Old January 18th 07, 03:48 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Maxwell
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Posts: 1,116
Default intake air filter choices


"Dick" wrote in message
news:GiKrh.2487$jG1.88@trnddc04...
After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick
(about 1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that
others are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick

http://www.knfilters.com/


  #5  
Old January 18th 07, 07:04 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dan Youngquist
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Posts: 37
Default intake air filter choices

On Thu, 18 Jan 2007, Maxwell wrote:

Check with the K&N filter folks. They have a lot of high performance
filters to choose from.


Amsoil makes an oiled foam filter that flows as good as K&N, and filters a
lot better. (And last I looked, they're cheaper.) They have them for
most automotive applications.

-Dan
  #6  
Old January 18th 07, 09:57 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
john smith
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Posts: 1,446
Default intake air filter choices

Dick wrote:

After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick (about
1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that others
are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick



Foam filters have a history of coming apart, getting sucked into the
carburetor, and causing blockages which results in the engine stopping.
Makes for interesting emergency landing explanations.

  #7  
Old January 18th 07, 11:39 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Scott[_1_]
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Posts: 367
Default intake air filter choices

Cripes! How cheap is cheap?! A replacement Brackett air filter is only
about 6 bucks and you replace it at each annual (unless you live in a
particularly dirty and dusty area)...

Scott



Dick wrote:

After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick (about
1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that others
are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick


  #8  
Old January 19th 07, 03:06 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
Dick[_1_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 71
Default intake air filter choices

ordered 2, thanks
"Scott" wrote in message
.. .
Cripes! How cheap is cheap?! A replacement Brackett air filter is only
about 6 bucks and you replace it at each annual (unless you live in a
particularly dirty and dusty area)...

Scott



Dick wrote:

After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick
(about 1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that
others are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick



  #9  
Old January 19th 07, 03:06 PM posted to rec.aviation.homebuilt
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,130
Default intake air filter choices


john smith wrote:
Dick wrote:

After using a lawn tractors slightly oiled, green foam filter on my
experimental with C-85, a fellow remarked that it was much too thick (about
1") as I replaced it.

Just wondering what non-certified (read cheap G) alternatives that others
are using. Seems like most guys use a pleated paper-like filter...

Thanks Dick



Foam filters have a history of coming apart, getting sucked into the
carburetor, and causing blockages which results in the engine stopping.
Makes for interesting emergency landing explanations.


We've been using the Brackett foam filters on our training
airplanes for 14 years (and 13 airplanes, five or six at any one time,
hundreds of hours per year per airplane) and have had no trouble
whatever. The filters work well enough that the engines reach TBO with
the compression still in the high 70s, even though we do a lot of
training off dirt strips, and are cheap to replace. It's not an oil in
the Brackett filter, its a glycerine or silicone goop of some sort.
Can't try to wash and re-oil it. It needs to be replaced yearly in any
case to prevent decaying foam getting into the intake.
There have been a couple of ADs against the Bracketts: one
involved the rear screen (aluminum) vibrating and flexing then breaking
and entering the engine; it was superceded by a steel-screened frame.
The other was to do with the filter frame/airbox gasket on some models
getting sucked in; another revision fixed that.
Every time we get another airplane it gets a Brackett.

Dan

 




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