Rich Grayo Jr. wrote:i've been rocking the k&n for a while now... and honestly, so long as you give the oil proper time to dry before installing, it doesnt matter how much you put on it. the gauze will only absorb so much, the rest will drip off while you let it set.
GM_Mike wrote:I have an aem dryflow right now on my intake. It doesn't need oil on those.
BuiltNBoosted wrote:your butt dyno measures flow and cfm of air filters? you gotta remember, weather, temp, gas, all change your mileage....
95LsCoupe wrote:Spectre cone, no oil, no problems, cheaper than K&N but offers the same visual look...I still heard K&N was better for performance, IMO I don't think it makes that much of a difference on my car since I'm stock.
95LsCoupe wrote:
@BuiltNBoosted-Off topic, is your bumper paint peeling under the headlight, bottom right corner of the sig? Just something I noticed, last I remember seeing a huge pic post of your car, it was mint.
BuiltNBoosted wrote:95LsCoupe wrote:
@BuiltNBoosted-Off topic, is your bumper paint peeling under the headlight, bottom right corner of the sig? Just something I noticed, last I remember seeing a huge pic post of your car, it was mint.
what? no.
BuiltNBoosted wrote:switching out filters directly solved my gear engagement problem
seriously? wow you are farther gone than I thought...
BuiltNBoosted wrote:switching out filters directly solved my gear engagement problem
seriously? wow you are farther gone than I thought...
Sunfiretun3r wrote:Any thoughts on S&B Filters? I don't remember if they are oiled or not, but supposedly they are better than K&N. At least that's what I've heard. So don't quote me.
As for me I'm just using the ebay filter until I need something better when I go boost.
novaderrik wrote:i think you are over thinking the oil thing.. the instructions on the piece of paper inside the box of both of the recharge kits i've purchased (one spray can, one with the white bottle) have both said to oil it just enough to make the cotton turn red. there might have been the specific amount of oil listed, but the "make it red" line is what i went by.
K&N wrote: "Oiling: Before oiling, refer to the bar code on the original air filter packaging or the K&N website for the recommended oil amount for your filter. After the filter is completely dry, use the bottle view strip to carefully dispense the recommended oil amount onto the filter by squeezing oil along each pleat, once only."
novaderrik wrote:
why are you worried about fowling up a MAF sensor? your car doesn't have one. i don't think any Cavalier built after 95 has had one, and i'm not even sure if any of them had one before that.. maybe the 3.1 powered cars did, i don't know.. but either way, it's a non issue for you.
worst case, you get some oil on your throttle blade.
i've never seen a MAF sensor that went bad from having too much oil on a K&N filter- i absolutely drowned the big cone filter in my 84 Buick Regal T Type with oil the first time i recharged it, and the car never showed any symptoms of running weird. the intake duct had a nice layer of oil, but the MAF still worked fine. i go easy with the oil now- just enough to dye the cotton slightly red.
Thirsty Z wrote:This company is boggling my mind --> not enough oil and your engine might as well be breathing through a dry t shirt, too much oil and you have a "restrictive engine sensor destroyer".... so naturally we are going to make it as hard as humanly possible for you to gauge how much oil you put on
Jason Burten wrote:well I have been running the AEM Dri Flow filter for about 4 years now,Seems to work well,Clean it every spring,looks good,And no oil,Just wash and dry,bolt back on.
BuiltNBoosted wrote:switching out filters directly solved my gear engagement issue
seriously? wow you are farther gone than I thought...