First - I do not care if you use a Scotts filter or not. It is all up to you what filter you use.
Second - I use a Scotts filter because I think it filters better than a paper filter this is my problem and no one elses.
Third - I do not care what you think about me using one or spending the money on one. This was my decision for my FJR!
Forth - In no way am I promoting this filter nor benefiting from telling you the information I have gathered.
I read the threads on on these filters and saw the All About Oil Filters link so I went to it. I E-Mailed Scotts and sent them this link.
This is what I sent them and the return E-Mail that I received from them. I thought you would be interested.
I purchased a Scotts filter for my 07 FJR. I am also a
member of the FJR.com. There are threads about the use
of your filter and one directed us to a web site
discussing filters including yours. Could you address
this sites concerns about your filter? I would like to
be able to redirect the benifit of using your filter
to the FJR group.
Thanks
KR
Here is the web site and the verbiage about your
filter.
https://www.calsci.com/motorcycleinfo/Filters.html#OilFilters
That web site has been around for some time now. If you look at the
beginning of his dissertation you will see that he prefaces it by
stating
that he is not technical in this field. You will also notice that he
has no
testing to rely on. He looks at some filters he cut apart, makes some
assumptions and then forms an "opinion".
As far as him thinking the technology not being ready to use yet, we
better
inform the aerospace program, military aircraft mechanics, race teams,
medical applications as well as every day users that have been trusting
this
technology for decades.
ASTM lab tests have shown that our filter exceeds the filtration
performance
of stock filters (as well as the aftermarket filters we've tested). Be
careful of marketing numbers that are thrown around for supposed filter
micron ratings (this is an hour long discussion by itself!).
Where we really shine is in the flow rates. In fact our filter can be
80%
plugged and still flow more oil than a stock paper filter. If there is
one
or two particles that don't come loose from the surface of the filter
element during a cleaning, it's not going to significantly affect the
performance of the filter. High flow rates also impact performance due
to
the reduced parasitic horsepower drain (we recently obtained dyno
numbers
from Santa Barbara Harley Davidson showing a 5 hp gain with our filter
over
stock). It also helps keep the bypass closed during cold startup and
high
rpm operation (it doesn't matter how good a filter is if the oil is
bypassing the filter media).
When looking at surface area of the element, more is not always better.
Think about the pleats being so close together that you effectively
negate
the filtering and flow capabilities of the sides of the pleats. Paper
filters need to use more surface area to overcome their flow
characteristics.
Considering the technology, performance, quality and production cost of
our
filter vs. a stock tin can filter, $119 is a bargain. If you are
looking to
scrimp, do it somewhere else besides your oil and oil filter. You paid
a
lot of money for your machine. Oil is the lifeblood of your engine.
Think
about it...
As an additional note, our filters are being run by multiple
competitive
race teams (pro stock cars, top fuel motorcycles, pro stock
motorcycles, pro
sport motorcycles...) These folks understand the technology and
benefits.
We don't take it lightly when someone trusts a multi million dollar
race
effort to our product.
Having said all of this, we're glad people want to check things out.
There
are some similar products out there (some are overseas knock offs of
our
filters that even use our pictures in their advertising!). The
performance
and quality of some of these filters are quite poor. Make sure you
are
getting a quality product (Scotts is top shelf in customer service as
well)
I would invite you to visit our web site's Q&A area for additional
information www.KandPEngineering.com as well as Scott's web site
www.scottsperformance.com . We will be updating the K&P Engineering
web
site with additional technical information in the not too distant
future.
Thanks for your purchase and for your interest in becoming better
informed.
The more you know about this subject, the better we look.
Enjoy that FJR!
for Scotts Performance
Dave Fisher
K&P Engineering
----- Original Message -----
From: "Jake Hulsebus" <
[email protected]>
To: <
[email protected]>
Sent: Monday, October 15, 2007 11:13 AM
Subject: FW: Your Oil Filter