The
History of Oil Filtration
Motor oil
filters have come a long way since the first design
was introduced in the 1920s.
This article
appeared in the AMSOIL DirectLine, February 2002
One of the most important
functions of motor oil is to capture and suspend
contaminants and wear particles, preventing premature
wear on an engines internal parts. Acting alone,
motor oil would quickly become saturated with
these contaminants and wear materials and would
require very frequent changing, perhaps as often
as every 500 miles, in order to effectively guard
against wear. It is an engines oil filter which
allows motor oil to last for an extended period
of time.
The earliest automobiles
did not have any sort of oil filtration, and it
was common to change oil every 500 to 2,000 miles.
Later, as pressure lubrication became standard
on automobiles, some kind of oil filtration was
necessary in order to protect the oil pump from
damage and wear. Early designs were quite primitive,
often consisting of nothing more than steel wool,
wire meshes or screens placed in the oil pump
intake. Many designs were cleanable and reusable.
The earliest incarnation
of the modern oil filter came about in 1923, when
Ernest Sweetland introduced his invention known
as the Purolator, a combination of the words Pure
Oil Later. Incorporated into the lubricating system
after the oil pump and before the oil flows into
the engine bearings, the original Purolator featured
an upright series of seven twill weave cloth-covered,
perforated plates encased in a heavy-duty cast
container. It also had a sight feed glass on one
side, enabling the owner to see the oil flow and
change the filter when flow slowed to a trickle.
James A. Abeles saw
enough potential in the Purolator to convert a
New York City garage into a company called Motor
Improvements Inc., developed primarily to manufacture
Purolator filters. The Maxwell Chalmers Company
also saw promise in this new product, installing
a Purolator on a Maxwell automobile which was
test-driven on a round-trip from Detroit to the
West Coast in 1924. The longer oil drain intervals,
cleaner oil and reduced engine wear offered by
the Purolator ensured endorsement by the automotive
industry, and they soon became standard on many
popular automobiles of the day, including Studebaker,
Pierce Arrow, Hupmobile, Peerless, Cadillac, Oakland,
Gardner, Moon, Jordan, Buick and Dodge.
Oil filter technology
continued to progress over the years. In the late
1930s, cotton waste material was introduced as
filtration media, providing the first filter replacement
capability. Various woven fabrics were also used
in some filter designs. By 1946, as disposable
filter models became the norm and interest in
saving production costs increased, materials such
as pleated paper and cellulose became the filtration
media materials of choice, materials that are
still widely used in todays oil filters.
Prior to 1943, most
oil filters were of the by-pass variety, only
filtering about 10 percent of the oil at a time.
The first full-flow oil filter, capable of filtering
100 percent of the motor oil, was introduced in
1943 and became standard on mass production vehicles
by 1946.
The modern disposable "spin-on" oil filter design
was introduced in 1955, replacing cartridge-type
filters which had to be placed in a special housing
or canister. The technology progressed throughout
the 1960s and spin-on oil filters soon became
standard on virtually all American, European and
Japanese automobile designs.
Todays spin-on oil
filters resemble metal cans that encase the filtration
media, which capture and hold the various organic
and inorganic contaminants and wear metals within
the motor oil. Organic contaminants include bacteria
and other organisms that make up sludge, while
inorganic contaminants include dust and dirt.
An engines oil pump
pumps motor oil from the oil sump to the oil filter.
Dirty oil passes through the oil filter media,
where it is cleaned before flowing to the central
tube and back into the engine through the mounting
stud. Oil is then distributed by oil passages
throughout the engine.
By-Pass Oil Filters
Secondary by-pass oil filters act separately from
an engines full-flow filter and only filter a
small portion of the oil in a system at a time,
subjecting it to additional and more thorough
cleaning than the full-flow filter is able to
provide.
Various styles of
by-pass systems exist on the market today. Some
feature centrifuge or thermal action, spinning
or boiling out contaminants, while others feature
extremely efficient media that remove smaller
contaminants. Originally marketed as a way to
effectively extend equipment life, the use of
by-pass filters are also effective in keeping
oil clean and capable of extended drain intervals.
The AMSOIL Advantage
As previously mentioned, many of todays conventional
oil filters make use of pleated paper or cellulose
as their filtration media. Although these filters
usually display good flow characteristics when
new, they tend to become obstructed fairly quickly.
In addition, these conventional filters exhibit
limited capacity, longevity and ability to catch
fine particles.
AMSOIL Super Duty
Oil Filters (SDF) are designed for maximum efficiency,
capacity and longevity, while meeting the high
flow demands of modern engine designs. In fact,
with its advanced filtration media composed of
a special Cellulose, Synthetic and Glass Blend,
AMSOIL SDF Oil Filters have over a 75 percent
better combined efficiency/capacity rating than
other popular oil filters as tested according
to industry standards. AMSOIL SDF Filters are
also approximately 65 percent efficient at removing
10 micron particles. In addition, AMSOIL SDF Filters
are designed for extended drain intervals of 12,500
miles or six months (whichever comes first), making
them ideal for use in conjunction with premium
AMSOIL Synthetic Motor Oils.
AMSOIL By-Pass
Filtration
Advanced engine designs place tough demands on
an engines full-flow filter, most of which are
capable of efficiently filtering out only coarser
wear particles, generally greater than 20 to 25
microns. However, approximately 60 percent of
engine wear is caused by particles in the 5 to
20 micron range. These tiny particles closely
match the precision clearances between critical
engine components, entering the spaces between
bearings, rings and other components and damaging
metal surfaces, altering tolerances, fatiguing
components and generating additional debris. For
the ultimate in filtration efficiency and wear
protection, AMSOIL offers the Spin-On By-Pass
Oil Filter.
The AMSOIL By-Pass
Oil Filter provides the best possible filtration
on the market, protecting against wear, oil degradation,
rust and corrosion. Situated outside the main
line of oil circulation, the AMSOIL By-Pass Filter
works in conjunction with the full-flow filter,
thoroughly filtering 10 percent of the oil at
a time and removing wear-causing contaminants
down to less than one micron in size. The AMSOIL
By-Pass Filter effectively filters all the oil
in a six quart system in about five minutes at
an average speed of 45 mph.
Water enters motor
oil as a combustion by-product or as a condensate.
When it contaminates motor oil, it can cause serious
engine damage by causing metal surface rust and
corrosion, which increases friction and wear and
deteriorates the close-fitting tolerances between
engine components. It can also react with other
contaminants to form corrosive acids, which also
damage metal components. The AMSOIL By-Pass Filter
effectively removes up to a pint of damaging water,
significantly increasing the time oil can be safely
left in the engine.
The effectiveness
of the AMSOIL By-Pass Filter lies in its construction.
Its high-capacity filtration medium is a special
blend of virgin wood and cotton fibers, formed
into discs, stacked and compressed. The center
tube is all-steel, perforated for oil flow and
wrapped with a fine mesh cotton screen. Each filter
includes a mounting unit with a spin-on filtering
cartridge, connected by hoses to engine ports.
The entire by-pass system fits into most cramped
engine compartments, allowing quick and easy access.
Particles sized down to less than one micron are
trapped and removed, while the filters thirsty
cellulose fibers remove water.
By-Pass Filter
Accessories:
The AMSOIL Dual Remote Oil Filtration System allows
an AMSOIL Super Duty Oil Filter and an AMSOIL
Spin-On By-Pass Filter to be attached onto a remote
mount, providing easy access for both filters.
Remote placement of the Dual Remote system allows
larger oil filters to be used and increases oil
sump capacity.
The AMSOIL Dual-Gard
Filtration System links two AMSOIL By-Pass Filter
elements together for engines with sump capacities
greater than 20 quarts.
See the G-385 Filtration Products Brochure for more
information.