Ghetto Fab.
No idea what I'm doing
- Joined
- May 19, 2020
- Member Number
- 208
- Messages
- 1,167
Can you post any links to the filters your looking at? I need ideas also.I've been doing a lot of research on filters and there aren't a ton of good options. Ill summarize:
Umps - The largest Ump (10925) which is 10" diameter and 17" long is only able to flow enough for like 400ish HP. Most of the big cars (Campbells) run dual umps. And that isn't even considering once the filter starts getting full.
K&N Cone Style - They flow enough, but I wouldn't consider them because of how much dust and particles they let through into your engine.
I would highly suggest a paper filter as they work so much better. Spend some time going through this catalog and look at your options.
https://www.donaldson.com/content/d...0027-ENG/Air-Intake-Systems-Product-Guide.pdf
In my current 4500 car I am running a C105004 which is 10.5" Diameter and 10.5" Long. It flows 500 cfm at 6" H20 of vacuum or 620 at 8". Higher the vacuum the harder the engine works to get air. There are different ideas about what vacuum value you should use to decide your filter and I felt like 6" to 8" was reasonable. My 6.2L engine at 6500 RPM with VE of 0.9 needs 640 cfm. So this filter is slightly on the not big enough side, but I couldn't fit any bigger.
On the new car, I am planning to go to a powercore filter which flows a lot more, with a lot smaller filters. These are the style of filters that the duramax and powerstroke use. Donaldson makes some really nice housings that even have centrifugal pre filters to remove like 70-80% of the dust from the air before it even reaches the filter. These are a little pricy for me, so I am probably going to use a powerstroke filter and add a precleaner. I have already been working on the design of it and have been putting it through some fluid dynamics programs to see if it will flow enough. My goal is 6" or shorter for the centrifugal filter.
Donaldson doesn't advertise the flow of the duramax and powerstroke filters, but I used the other powercore filters that they have information posted for and created some spreadsheets and charts to estimate what they can flow based on area and volume of the filter. Based on my estimations, the powerstroke filter should flow 684 CFM at 6" or 777 CFM at 8". So plenty of flow, as well as an off the shelf filter that any parts house should have. I will need to make adapters for either side of the filter, but that shouldn't be too hard.
Its funny when you look at the UMP filters and Shannon is running two of them, then look at a stock powerstroke truck and see how small that filter really is. Like most, I don't have a ton of room, luckily also not a big motor making big power either, so something smaller should work.