I also used the Amsoil top-tier synthetic oil, the Amsoil spin-on (full flow) filter, Amsoil By-pass filter and did an annual oil analysis. After the first sample, I was told that the oil was breaking down and I had late ignition timing or a faulty pollution control device. I asked how it was possible on a new car without codes on the computer or a decrease in performance or fuel economy. After checking it out, I found out the O2 sensor had gone out. I replaced the sensor and oil filters leaving the rest of the oil in the engine. After 6,000 miles I had the oil analyzed again and everything was OK. Each year the oil analysis said the engine and the oil was OK. The car went 170,000 miles and 9 1/2 years without an oil change! The extended oil change interval with Amsoil products is great. But the real value is knowing the true condition of the engine and of the oil. Too bad the new owner's teenage son wrecked the car. When the oil is kept "analytically" clean, there isn't anything in the crankcase to help wear out the engine. My Toyota Tacoma with an Amsoil By-pass system had to have it's oil changed at only 30,000 miles. But then each engine is different as well as the driving conditions that we put the vehicle through. I have saved a lot of money with Amsoil over the years but then, not everyone keeps their vehicles as long as I do. My 2004 Prius has over 220,000 miles on it and my wife and I still fight over which one will get to drive it each day. And like Mike Vaughn says, everyone is free to do their own thing with their vehicles. Good luck and pass on your own stories.
@@jamestan6081 Big trucks normally use oil analysis. The idea of not "allowing" an engine to wear out (for an individual that plans to keep his vehicle) is the reason I went with the by-pass filter system. I would love to put the Amsoil filter system on my 2018 Prius Prime. But, in fact, most cars don't have the room under the hood and most everything underneath has plastic panels to help air flow. I wish there was a filter to combine in one housing the full flow concept and the slow deep filter ability of a by-pass filter.
Hi; I've been doing what you do for many years. First on my 96 2500, and for the last 6 years on my 08 6.7 Cummins. My truck is used almost exclusively for towing our rv trailer all over the US. It's the best thing for a diesel to be challenged with some weight consistently. The lab always gives me high marks in every category. I change my primary filter every 8k, and the bypass at 40 k. Every time That I change filters, I pour fresh oil into them though to keep my additive package consistentl. I once drove for a trucking company that went 240K on their oil with no ill effects doing filter and bypass filter changes only, so I wanted a piece of that. Michael
Great Video! I have been using Amsoil in over 25 vehicles total since 1975 when I started using it. I have never had a major engine failure during that time. I have had several vehicles go over 200,000 miles and a few over 300,000 miles. I usually trade them or rebuild the engines because they have so many miles on them that the compression starts dropping, fuel mileage goes down, and they won't haul a load any more. So joke all you want about expensive oil or expensive filters or expensive testing ... but I think it's cheap when you don't have to tear engines apart and get valve jobs, oil pumps, lifters, head gaskets, done over again! :)
thanks to you, graduated from automotive mechanic school in 2004 and today i justnlearned a new trick on how to change a trickyplaced filter without making a mess
Carl McDonald people always have to find something to bitch about. Usually those complaining sit of their duff's and don't even try to do their own channels
@@ScottTheMarine curious enough to complain about what they should already know yet complain they have to see it instead of gathering an authentic thought.
If you make a complete turn with the cutter before tightening it up a little it will prolong the cutting blade significantly and also keep it from being so hard to turn for ya. Not telling you what to do by any means just a helpful hint when using it. Shouldn't ever be to hard to turn when greasy really. Will have to make 10 or so turns around the filter but making small cuts is how it's designed to work. Make a complete turn tighten the cutter a little and another complete turn!! Really like your videos, highly educational and more people should tune in and watch! If you care about your vehicle which is very important being it's what takes you too and from and we depend on our vehicles to do everything really!! Everyone should care what's going on inside the engines, could save you so much money by catching a problem before it's catastrophic!!
I used a similar magnet inside a remote transmission filter base, and a washer type magnet on the filter threads, both magnets were covered with iron much like a magnefine filter. I'm not sure that magnets help in the engine filter, but Allison has one under their spin on Transmission filter on GM vehicles. I believe in having magnetic plugs on the differential and some type of magnet in any Automatic transmission.
Love the idea putting a plastic bag over the filter to remove it. Great idea. I think I will stick to changing my oil on a regular 4000 miles or less depends on how durty it looks.
Interesting. I will be installing a bypass amsoil system on my 6.7l Ford. I figured it would filter out the soot as you showed. I will be ordering some magnets as well it will be interesting to see how ferrous metal I see. Thanks nice video.
Take the pleats out and squeeze them in a vice and it will drain the oil from the pleats making you able to see any metallic objects in the mesh of the pleat medium. Just my two cents
After squeezing the filter in the vice if you carefully burn the filter media (if its glass media this doesn't work) you can put a magnet in a plastic bag and wave it over the ashes so you can see what metal was trapped.....
I ran amsoil in my 1980 BJ60 Landcruiser from approx 1984 to 2006 with the same oil and by -pass filter set up and it still ran fine....the body died before the engine did still ran the day I gave it away.
I also cut open my oil filters. Try a piece of sandpaper instead of a rag, or both with the sandpaper touching the filter and the rag absorbing any small drlplets.
Nice... I've been running a BP110 on my 2001 7.3 power stroke forever... Used DELO 400 for the first 100K, then used Rotella T6... Wow, the synthetic made the HPOP injection come alive. My oil always looks (black) like your VW, but when doing valve cover gaskets I wiped the inside with a paper towel & HOLY CRAP, there was no black on the paper towel... Also, for any haters ... how about (only those running BY PASS oil filtration systems) deserve to be heard, all others can go buy some SLICK 50....
That's the way it should be. The detergents in the oil are suppose to keep contaminants in suspension so they drain out with the old oil (or get caught by the filter) and therefore do not build-up in the engine.
The only upside to the emissions equipment on late model diesels is that it has forced oil manufacturers to greatly increase oil’s detergency, heat stability, and resistance to shear from fuel dilution. There are countless over the road trucks running 80k mile intervals with $12 a gallon Delo, Delvac, and Rotella. All using bypass filters and oil sampling of course. You honestly don’t have to pay boutique oil prices if you’re running a good bypass system. Magnetic filtration definitely work. Most expensive hydro systems and differentials have multiple magnets inside the cases.
Like you said. You cut the filter open for peace of mind. And waste of money? You already own the cutter. I’d be cutting mine open as well if I owned a oil filter cutter. Great videos
you are a perfect corporate example of the fear based population, they move only when threatened with sudden death. every 3 month or 3000 miles. I like to have you as a client when you drive 150,000 miles a year ha ha ha!
I change my oil every 5,000 miles. I wouldn’t consider myself fear based at all. Starting a business and taking risks to potentially lead a better life in the future. 🤷♂️. But I follow basic maintenance procedures because I’d like to keep my vehicles running longer.
The reason you can go the extra miles before a oil change is needed, is the filters along with the oil and monitoring with samples. I remember when people call synthetic oil snake oil. Most people will not believe what you tell them if they have been told something else by someone else first. I have tried to educate many people in the advantage of Amsoil. Most won't listen even with proof. Kinda like someone voting for a liberal.....
You happen to know when amsoil started making their bypass filters differently? May be having a crazy moment, but I swear cutting them open 20 yrs ago they had almost something that looked like brillo pads or sponges stacked in them to filter the oil down finely and didn't they filter better than the 2 microns they're rated for now? Maybe I'm just remembering something completely wrong or it's a different filter option?
The bypass filter, I believe, would have definitely caught those small metal particles but how will we ever know? Can those be measured to see what size they are?
That's the debate in all the other oil filter magnet videos. Flow vs filtration. What size are they? Do they tend to be oblong and can "needle" their way thru the filter media? Would their entrapment shorten the service life of the filter? Would their entrapment enhance the ability of the filter media to capture more smaller particles as the media plugs up? I find it interesting that the material the magnet captured is black, not metallic. Maybe some "by-catch" is taking place and it catching some sludge. Best place for all that is in the filter.
I think its cook u do this i have been in the last few yrs been look at the oil that pours out of my filters i have 2 4cly Toyota pickups and one the oil is always dirty with dirt particles and the other is always shiny like metal!
@@markspence20xx Yes I know how much I have spent and you can go to Amsoil and look it all up yourself do the math and see for yourself. I have to go make some $$ now and will let you crunch to numbers. I already did a long time ago. Good luck to you as you work through this.
Who cares if it saves money or not. It seems it's a hobby as much as anything and educational research at the same time. If you enjoy doing it that contributes to it's worth and anyone watching the results here can benefit. If someone else thinks it's a waste of time and money they are entitled to their opinion. (Maybe they should start watching all the videos on the Project Farm channel?)
Good for you if I could squeeze some stuff in my car I'd put it in its mine I want last as long as possible I wanna do cvt bypass just figure cooler better but if could get um all in would caint hurt just alot cleaner
UOA are NOT only to see the condition of the oil but to spot issues in engine wear BEFORE you would have any symptoms. You don't need to do them every time. Once you see how your engine runs on a particular oil and your driving style, then you could do them every so often. However most people would only change their oil once per years so that's only 50 cents per week and I am sure you can pony up for that.
@@9thGenAccord Thanks for the insight! I just switched to 15k mile oil changes on my friends Hyundai Elantra, whose oil I am starting to change. He used to take it to Walmart and went 6-7k miles on their cheapest package. I couldn't take that anymore. I might talk to him about doing a UOA on this first 15k mile interval to see if its OK with his extremely aggressive driving style (he drives stick and is always blasting it around at high engine RPM).
Yes once you do a few OA then you will be able to get a sense of how a particular oil responds to that engine and driving style. I do know in my Dodge I could NOT get the oil to come back from the lab in poor condition. I had the Amsoil bypass filter on it and it always kept it clean. No oil changes just annual filter changes.
UOA is NOT just to decide to change oil. It shows you the internal condition of the engine AND can show you problems and trends before you will ever see or here them. So yes I really know how to save money by preventing severe engine damage. Thanks for your astute observation.
I've saved a ton of money in oil changes using amsoil and by pass filtration. What's 30$ when using 3.5 gallons of oil in a diesel after it's proven it's still great. My 6.0 though is an oil destroyer.... But my other gear, the oil lasts over 800 hours....
Buy Puralater Boss oil filters, the best filter ever!
5 років тому+1
What on Earth are you talking about??? The Amsoil Bypass Oil Filter filters oil at an unprecedented 2 microns!!! No other oil filter in history has ever been able to accomplish that!!!
@@stevensevek6151 it is a BYPASS filter, meaning it takes a small amount of oil from an oil galley some where on the engine, usually from a tee under the oil pressure sender for instance and sends it to the bypass filter and where it is slowly and more completly filtered down to about a micron or two circulating the entire content of the engine oil in the crankcase through the bypass filter in about 10 minutes or so at highway speeds. So it offers no particular restriction to oil flow to the engine. You still use a full flow filter as well.
Like your video... and your "Prevention & Smart Detection" set up... yeah there is a "little" detection going on but you have the fine media by-pass filter as insurance... I will definitely start using magnets BUT I will still change my Amsoil every 4,000 to 5,000 miles... with a new filter... Yes I may be paranoid, however I do sleep better at night spending the $6 for the filter every 4,000/5,000 miles..... I would be remiss if I did not recommend a simple thing that observed when you were struggling to cut the boss off the filters... ;-) Maybe it is part of your workout routine and I get that but you COULD save some effort by grabbing an old oil filter wrench, slapping it on the circumference of the used oil filter (not hitting the magnets) to secure it for the cutting process.... just a thought.... I saw you decided to use the vise to hold the used by-pass filter, good move.....
Since the terms "Synthetic", "Full Synthetic" and "100% Synthetic" are merely marketing jibberish in the U.S., it's hard to know if any oil has APO or POE. We know that with gas engine oil in the U.S., only 4 brands are true synthetic: REDLINE, Royal Purple, AMSOIL Signature Series, and Joe Gibbs Racing, which is made by one of the previous 3. These are Group 4/5, with about even PAO and POE. But diesel oil is a mystery. In Germany and Japan, if the label has the word "Synthetic", it must be at least Group 4. German oils like Motul and Liqui-Moly have a bit more Ester. Group 5 esters are used in Jet engine bearings, which have no cooling systems. Group 3 would vaporize. Avoid the over-priced Group 3s like Castrol Edge, Pennzoil Platinum and Mobil 1. You are paying Group 4/5 prices for a Group 3. If you like group 3, buy the Warren syns like Amazon Basics, Costco Kirkland, MAG 1 and Walmart SuperTech. All the same. Rated SN+. On sale, Costco sells Kirkland for less than $3.00 a quart. If you want the real story on how they took synthetic out of synthetic oil, look up the November 2000 issue of Car and Driver. Article by Patrick Bedard: "All New Semantics for Synthetic Oil". By taking the synthetic base out, the oil companies reduced their cost by 50%. But you still pay a high price for Group 3. Mobil 1 Fanboys - you are being screwed. It's a big conspiracy.
This guy is using way too much pressure on his cutter yet just tied it up lightly and an old cut a lot better don't try to cut it all at once what kind of guy is this?
Oil cost analysis cost more than oil. If your car uses only about a gallon of oil then it is not worth it. What you can do though to save more money is follow automaker's recommendations for oil changes or you can actually go a little bit beyond depending on your driving conditions.
Fast food restaurants filter their fryer oil everyday and use it until it it totally burnt and the food quality is affected as a cost cutting measure. The lab will tell you if the oil is losing viscosity, the TBN/TAN is depleted, if there is fuel dilution, if the contaminants & anti-wear additives are suitable for continued use. Any reputable fleet will use Oil Analysis to determine their maintenance practices and the cost is factored into their operating budget to avoid costly downtime due to repairs.. If you are blind to Good Management, take your car to Walmart and pay those idiots for unnecessary oil and filter changes and/or incompetent work thinking you are saving money.
Why do some tractor trailer drivers go 60000 miles and up with oil analysis? If it's so bad? It's best to study why people do extended and the results verses ridiculing it.
I will never ever ever understand why people still go anything over 3,000 miles on their oil, it’s so cheap and so easy to do! Over 300,000 miles on my 5.3 no problems
How did you come up with the magical number of 3k for an oil change?? I will tell you....advertising and marketing. You have been sold a bill of goods that only benefits the oil companies. For decades radio, print, tv etc said change at 3k, now everyone parrots that back as if something magical happens when the odometer turns to 3k. Don't believe me? Do a UOA and let the facts tell you. I bet you will be amazed that the oil did magically go bad when the 2999.9 rolled over that .1 to 3k.
No I don’t believe you one bit. You’re a salesman just to try to sell more product. And no, my oil doesn’t go bad right at 3k it’s so cheap to change it early and it’s been proven for years and years and years. This new technology really is a bunch of crap, just a big waste of time and money.
Well I don't sell Amsoil and could care less whether you believe me or not. I wont gain once cent if you use Amsoil or not. Your pretty ignorant about oil, so I will just let you go about your simpleton ways concerning oil
4 роки тому
Nancy Hagen you really don’t know shit about modern cars. Yeah way back in your dino days cars needed changes that often, not true in modern cars.
so, if u truly followed ur " rules " u changed ur oil & filter 100 times... if u had used AMSOIL signature series, & changed oil & filter @ 25,000 miles, u wood hav done so only 12 times...
I also used the Amsoil top-tier synthetic oil, the Amsoil spin-on (full flow) filter, Amsoil By-pass filter and did an annual oil analysis. After the first sample, I was told that the oil was breaking down and I had late ignition timing or a faulty pollution control device. I asked how it was possible on a new car without codes on the computer or a decrease in performance or fuel economy. After checking it out, I found out the O2 sensor had gone out. I replaced the sensor and oil filters leaving the rest of the oil in the engine. After 6,000 miles I had the oil analyzed again and everything was OK. Each year the oil analysis said the engine and the oil was OK. The car went 170,000 miles and 9 1/2 years without an oil change! The extended oil change interval with Amsoil products is great. But the real value is knowing the true condition of the engine and of the oil. Too bad the new owner's teenage son wrecked the car. When the oil is kept "analytically" clean, there isn't anything in the crankcase to help wear out the engine. My Toyota Tacoma with an Amsoil By-pass system had to have it's oil changed at only 30,000 miles. But then each engine is different as well as the driving conditions that we put the vehicle through. I have saved a lot of money with Amsoil over the years but then, not everyone keeps their vehicles as long as I do. My 2004 Prius has over 220,000 miles on it and my wife and I still fight over which one will get to drive it each day. And like Mike Vaughn says, everyone is free to do their own thing with their vehicles. Good luck and pass on your own stories.
170k miles then oil change. Wow
Dale Yaeger , you need therapy if your this obsessed with your oil fettish . Jeezus dude. Lol
U use full flow and bypass on ur prius too??
@@jamestan6081 Big trucks normally use oil analysis. The idea of not "allowing" an engine to wear out (for an individual that plans to keep his vehicle) is the reason I went with the by-pass filter system. I would love to put the Amsoil filter system on my 2018 Prius Prime. But, in fact, most cars don't have the room under the hood and most everything underneath has plastic panels to help air flow. I wish there was a filter to combine in one housing the full flow concept and the slow deep filter ability of a by-pass filter.
Hi;
I've been doing what you do for many years. First on my 96 2500, and for the last 6 years on my 08 6.7 Cummins.
My truck is used almost exclusively for towing our rv trailer all over the US. It's the best thing for a diesel to be challenged with some weight consistently.
The lab always gives me high marks in every category.
I change my primary filter every 8k, and the bypass at 40 k. Every time That I change filters, I pour fresh oil into them though to keep my additive package consistentl.
I once drove for a trucking company that went 240K on their oil with no ill effects doing filter and bypass filter changes only, so I wanted a piece of that.
Michael
Great Video! I have been using Amsoil in over 25 vehicles total since 1975 when I started using it. I have never had a major engine failure during that time. I have had several vehicles go over 200,000 miles and a few over 300,000 miles. I usually trade them or rebuild the engines because they have so many miles on them that the compression starts dropping, fuel mileage goes down, and they won't haul a load any more. So joke all you want about expensive oil or expensive filters or expensive testing ... but I think it's cheap when you don't have to tear engines apart and get valve jobs, oil pumps, lifters, head gaskets, done over again! :)
What were your oil change intervals like sir?
Been using Amsoil lubricants in everything I own since 1975. It is the last word superior lubrication period.
thanks to you, graduated from automotive mechanic school in 2004 and today i justnlearned a new trick on how to change a trickyplaced filter without making a mess
If you're not curious about what's inside the filter why would you click on the video
Carl McDonald people always have to find something to bitch about. Usually those complaining sit of their duff's and don't even try to do their own channels
@@ScottTheMarine curious enough to complain about what they should already know yet complain they have to see it instead of gathering an authentic thought.
Your are Smart! Always investigate, and Always ask Why??? Cut open anything that can be cut. then look very carefully!! Well done!
If you make a complete turn with the cutter before tightening it up a little it will prolong the cutting blade significantly and also keep it from being so hard to turn for ya. Not telling you what to do by any means just a helpful hint when using it. Shouldn't ever be to hard to turn when greasy really. Will have to make 10 or so turns around the filter but making small cuts is how it's designed to work. Make a complete turn tighten the cutter a little and another complete turn!! Really like your videos, highly educational and more people should tune in and watch! If you care about your vehicle which is very important being it's what takes you too and from and we depend on our vehicles to do everything really!! Everyone should care what's going on inside the engines, could save you so much money by catching a problem before it's catastrophic!!
I was thinking the same thing! He is going way too fast, little at a time and its real easy
I used a similar magnet inside a remote transmission filter base, and a washer type magnet on the filter threads, both magnets were covered with iron much like a magnefine filter. I'm not sure that magnets help in the engine filter, but Allison has one under their spin on Transmission filter on GM vehicles. I believe in having magnetic plugs on the differential and some type of magnet in any Automatic transmission.
Sandpaper is great for handling oil filters, I prefer it over a wrench as well.
Great video. I have a 2001 Cummins as well. Switched to the 15W-40 Amsoil 10k miles ago. Just changed it. I'll be getting the Bypass kit next.
Love the idea putting a plastic bag over the filter to remove it. Great idea. I think I will stick to changing my oil on a regular 4000 miles or less depends on how durty it looks.
Interesting. I will be installing a bypass amsoil system on my 6.7l Ford. I figured it would filter out the soot as you showed. I will be ordering some magnets as well it will be interesting to see how ferrous metal I see. Thanks nice video.
Take the pleats out and squeeze them in a vice and it will drain the oil from the pleats making you able to see any metallic objects in the mesh of the pleat medium. Just my two cents
After squeezing the filter in the vice if you carefully burn the filter media (if its glass media this doesn't work) you can put a magnet in a plastic bag and wave it over the ashes so you can see what metal was trapped.....
I've always squeezed with the vice but didn't think about the burn. Thanks
I ran amsoil in my 1980 BJ60 Landcruiser from approx 1984 to 2006 with the same oil and by -pass filter set up and it still ran fine....the body died before the engine did still ran the day I gave it away.
The Magnets caught the very small particles around the .01 metal flakes. Yes the Mags work!
I also cut open my oil filters. Try a piece of sandpaper instead of a rag, or both with the sandpaper touching the filter and the rag absorbing any small drlplets.
Nice... I've been running a BP110 on my 2001 7.3 power stroke forever... Used DELO 400 for the first 100K, then used Rotella T6... Wow, the synthetic made the HPOP injection come alive. My oil always looks (black) like your VW, but when doing valve cover gaskets I wiped the inside with a paper towel & HOLY CRAP, there was no black on the paper towel...
Also, for any haters ... how about (only those running BY PASS oil filtration systems) deserve to be heard, all others can go buy some SLICK 50....
That's the way it should be. The detergents in the oil are suppose to keep contaminants in suspension so they drain out with the old oil (or get caught by the filter) and therefore do not build-up in the engine.
The only upside to the emissions equipment on late model diesels is that it has forced oil manufacturers to greatly increase oil’s detergency, heat stability, and resistance to shear from fuel dilution. There are countless over the road trucks running 80k mile intervals with $12 a gallon Delo, Delvac, and Rotella. All using bypass filters and oil sampling of course. You honestly don’t have to pay boutique oil prices if you’re running a good bypass system. Magnetic filtration definitely work. Most expensive hydro systems and differentials have multiple magnets inside the cases.
The new Max Duty oil is much better than the rest. We sell a lot of that 15W-40.
Now that's preventive maintenance!
Like you said. You cut the filter open for peace of mind. And waste of money? You already own the cutter. I’d be cutting mine open as well if I owned a oil filter cutter. Great videos
I’m not a person to mess around with oil changes rather change my oil too soon then too late
you are a perfect corporate example of the fear based population, they move only when threatened with sudden death. every 3 month or 3000 miles. I like to have you as a client when you drive 150,000 miles a year ha ha ha!
I change my oil every 5,000 miles. I wouldn’t consider myself fear based at all. Starting a business and taking risks to potentially lead a better life in the future. 🤷♂️. But I follow basic maintenance procedures because I’d like to keep my vehicles running longer.
The reason you can go the extra miles before a oil change is needed, is the filters along with the oil and monitoring with samples. I remember when people call synthetic oil snake oil. Most people will not believe what you tell them if they have been told something else by someone else first. I have tried to educate many people in the advantage of Amsoil. Most won't listen even with proof. Kinda like someone voting for a liberal.....
Great video, totally agree. I have a question, why do you swap the oil from 15w40 to 5w30?
The Series 3000 is a little more robust and wanted to see how it improves the winter cold starts.
You happen to know when amsoil started making their bypass filters differently? May be having a crazy moment, but I swear cutting them open 20 yrs ago they had almost something that looked like brillo pads or sponges stacked in them to filter the oil down finely and didn't they filter better than the 2 microns they're rated for now? Maybe I'm just remembering something completely wrong or it's a different filter option?
This should be good for the Enviormetalist, "stop changing your oil and put the oil companies out of biusness"!
If they were not curious, they wouldn't be watching or commenting. lol
I wonder what would happen if the magnets were after the filter.
I wonder if it's worth putting in a bypass filter on my 2003 CRV ?
Why not put magnets on the bypass filter as well
The bypass filter, I believe, would have definitely caught those small metal particles but how will we ever know? Can those be measured to see what size they are?
That's the debate in all the other oil filter magnet videos. Flow vs filtration. What size are they? Do they tend to be oblong and can "needle" their way thru the filter media? Would their entrapment shorten the service life of the filter? Would their entrapment enhance the ability of the filter media to capture more smaller particles as the media plugs up?
I find it interesting that the material the magnet captured is black, not metallic. Maybe some "by-catch" is taking place and it catching some sludge. Best place for all that is in the filter.
Would the magnets effect the oil analogous?
What's it cost to have oil analysis? I would suspect it is more than an oil change.
Consider using oil filter wrench.
Yes your right!
Kevin Kye or sand paper
I was expecting the oil from the bypass filter to be cleaner looking.
I think its cook u do this i have been in the last few yrs been look at the oil that pours out of my filters i have 2 4cly Toyota pickups and one the oil is always dirty with dirt particles and the other is always shiny like metal!
If you were to add up the money you spent on the bypass kit, bypass filters, and the laboratory analyses, how much conventional oil could you buy?
Ok so lets say I run 100k on the oil. You do the math and report back.
@@9thGenAccord Are you saying that you don't know how much you spent on the kit, the bypass filters, and the oil analyses?
@@markspence20xx Yes I know how much I have spent and you can go to Amsoil and look it all up yourself do the math and see for yourself. I have to go make some $$ now and will let you crunch to numbers. I already did a long time ago. Good luck to you as you work through this.
@@9thGenAccord Dude, this is your project. What's the running total so far for the bypass filter kit, bypass filters. new oil, and the oil tests?
Who cares if it saves money or not. It seems it's a hobby as much as anything and educational research at the same time. If you enjoy doing it that contributes to it's worth and anyone watching the results here can benefit. If someone else thinks it's a waste of time and money they are entitled to their opinion. (Maybe they should start watching all the videos on the Project Farm channel?)
If you think you can see or even feel metal contaminants of say 20 microns ( which is huge) guess again.
How many miles did you do on theboil
Trying to get Amsoil to send me one. I’ll give a real world analysis from my PowerStroke
Good for you if I could squeeze some stuff in my car I'd put it in its mine I want last as long as possible I wanna do cvt bypass just figure cooler better but if could get um all in would caint hurt just alot cleaner
How much are your oil analyses where you send them? I see places like Blackstone Labs charge $25 per analysis and I don't see the value.
UOA are NOT only to see the condition of the oil but to spot issues in engine wear BEFORE you would have any symptoms. You don't need to do them every time. Once you see how your engine runs on a particular oil and your driving style, then you could do them every so often. However most people would only change their oil once per years so that's only 50 cents per week and I am sure you can pony up for that.
@@9thGenAccord Thanks for the insight! I just switched to 15k mile oil changes on my friends Hyundai Elantra, whose oil I am starting to change. He used to take it to Walmart and went 6-7k miles on their cheapest package. I couldn't take that anymore. I might talk to him about doing a UOA on this first 15k mile interval to see if its OK with his extremely aggressive driving style (he drives stick and is always blasting it around at high engine RPM).
Yes once you do a few OA then you will be able to get a sense of how a particular oil responds to that engine and driving style. I do know in my Dodge I could NOT get the oil to come back from the lab in poor condition. I had the Amsoil bypass filter on it and it always kept it clean. No oil changes just annual filter changes.
Show us how clean the oil is..
Great video Russell, Where do you get your magnets? Thanks
Here ya go. amzn.to/2mAhhRZ
9th Gen Accord Thank you Russell!
Russell Back? Odd name for sure,, ha
So you don't change oil, instead you pay $30+ for an oil analysis. Wow! You really know how to save money. lol!
UOA is NOT just to decide to change oil. It shows you the internal condition of the engine AND can show you problems and trends before you will ever see or here them. So yes I really know how to save money by preventing severe engine damage. Thanks for your astute observation.
I've saved a ton of money in oil changes using amsoil and by pass filtration. What's 30$ when using 3.5 gallons of oil in a diesel after it's proven it's still great.
My 6.0 though is an oil destroyer....
But my other gear, the oil lasts over 800 hours....
This isn’t a 4 quart gas engine so yes,it’s a huge savings.
@@9thGenAccord And just how does the engine look on the inside? have your torn it apart?
I agree that is crazy.
Where do you get your oil analysed ?
Blackstone or Oil Analyzers.
Buy Puralater Boss oil filters, the best filter ever!
What on Earth are you talking about??? The Amsoil Bypass Oil Filter filters oil at an unprecedented 2 microns!!! No other oil filter in history has ever been able to accomplish that!!!
@ 2 microns has to really reduce oil flow through the he media. A micron is about as big as a human blood cell.
@@JohnSmith-wd9rc That is definitely true, which is one reason that setup uses a full bonus quart of oil, and a proprietary oil flowing process.
@@JohnSmith-wd9rc
I think that's why the filters are so huge... It eliminates the possibility of reduced oil flow.
@@stevensevek6151 it is a BYPASS filter, meaning it takes a small amount of oil from an oil galley some where on the engine, usually from a tee under the oil pressure sender for instance and sends it to the bypass filter and where it is slowly and more completly filtered down to about a micron or two circulating the entire content of the engine oil in the crankcase through the bypass filter in about 10 minutes or so at highway speeds. So it offers no particular restriction to oil flow to the engine. You still use a full flow filter as well.
Cool fat fingers! Do u run a bypass filter on your Jetta also i was think n to put by pass on my 1990 Cummins that has alot of sut build up also
I use to run the Trasko bypass but don't anymore. I have several vids on it,. just search the channel.
Like your video... and your "Prevention & Smart Detection" set up... yeah there is a "little" detection going on but you have the fine media by-pass filter as insurance... I will definitely start using magnets BUT I will still change my Amsoil every 4,000 to 5,000 miles... with a new filter... Yes I may be paranoid, however I do sleep better at night spending the $6 for the filter every 4,000/5,000 miles..... I would be remiss if I did not recommend a simple thing that observed when you were struggling to cut the boss off the filters... ;-) Maybe it is part of your workout routine and I get that but you COULD save some effort by grabbing an old oil filter wrench, slapping it on the circumference of the used oil filter (not hitting the magnets) to secure it for the cutting process.... just a thought.... I saw you decided to use the vise to hold the used by-pass filter, good move.....
Is AMSOIL Series 3000 Diesel Oil Group 3 or Group 4?
Group 4.
Ha!
Since the terms "Synthetic", "Full Synthetic" and "100% Synthetic" are merely marketing jibberish in the U.S., it's hard to know if any oil has APO or POE. We know that with gas engine oil in the U.S., only 4 brands are true synthetic: REDLINE, Royal Purple, AMSOIL Signature Series, and Joe Gibbs Racing, which is made by one of the previous 3. These are Group 4/5, with about even PAO and POE. But diesel oil is a mystery. In Germany and Japan, if the label has the word "Synthetic", it must be at least Group 4. German oils like Motul and Liqui-Moly have a bit more Ester. Group 5 esters are used in Jet engine bearings, which have no cooling systems. Group 3 would vaporize. Avoid the over-priced Group 3s like Castrol Edge, Pennzoil Platinum and Mobil 1. You are paying Group 4/5 prices for a Group 3. If you like group 3, buy the Warren syns like Amazon Basics, Costco Kirkland, MAG 1 and Walmart SuperTech. All the same. Rated SN+. On sale, Costco sells Kirkland for less than $3.00 a quart. If you want the real story on how they took synthetic out of synthetic oil, look up the November 2000 issue of Car and Driver. Article by Patrick Bedard: "All New Semantics for Synthetic Oil". By taking the synthetic base out, the oil companies reduced their cost by 50%. But you still pay a high price for Group 3. Mobil 1 Fanboys - you are being screwed. It's a big conspiracy.
That's a sexy ear
This guy is using way too much pressure on his cutter yet just tied it up lightly and an old cut a lot better don't try to cut it all at once what kind of guy is this?
I agree. He doesn't know how to use it
Oil cost analysis cost more than oil. If your car uses only about a gallon of oil then it is not worth it. What you can do though to save more money is follow automaker's recommendations for oil changes or you can actually go a little bit beyond depending on your driving conditions.
Imagine if you fry foods the same oil for a year trust me your going to get sick,same on cars
WHAT! One thing has nothing to do with the other. Do you have a filter on your fryer?
Not true. Study oil and by pass filtration.
Fast food restaurants filter their fryer oil everyday and use it until it it totally burnt and the food quality is affected as a cost cutting measure. The lab will tell you if the oil is losing viscosity, the TBN/TAN is depleted, if there is fuel dilution, if the contaminants & anti-wear additives are suitable for continued use. Any reputable fleet will use Oil Analysis to determine their maintenance practices and the cost is factored into their operating budget to avoid costly downtime due to repairs.. If you are blind to Good Management, take your car to Walmart and pay those idiots for unnecessary oil and filter changes and/or incompetent work thinking you are saving money.
@@heavymechanic2 For what an oil analysis lab charges, I could buy 6 quarts of oil and a new filter.
Thus the reason for the oil analysis... To confirm that is NOT happening.
That's what happened when you believe in 12,000 oil change it worn ur engine it's better to change oil every 3,000 miles
Mobile 1 advance full synthetic I change it every 6 months that's what I read on my owners manual
Why do some tractor trailer drivers go 60000 miles and up with oil analysis? If it's so bad? It's best to study why people do extended and the results verses ridiculing it.
I will never ever ever understand why people still go anything over 3,000 miles on their oil, it’s so cheap and so easy to do! Over 300,000 miles on my 5.3 no problems
How did you come up with the magical number of 3k for an oil change?? I will tell you....advertising and marketing. You have been sold a bill of goods that only benefits the oil companies. For decades radio, print, tv etc said change at 3k, now everyone parrots that back as if something magical happens when the odometer turns to 3k. Don't believe me? Do a UOA and let the facts tell you. I bet you will be amazed that the oil did magically go bad when the 2999.9 rolled over that .1 to 3k.
No I don’t believe you one bit. You’re a salesman just to try to sell more product. And no, my oil doesn’t go bad right at 3k it’s so cheap to change it early and it’s been proven for years and years and years. This new technology really is a bunch of crap, just a big waste of time and money.
Well I don't sell Amsoil and could care less whether you believe me or not. I wont gain once cent if you use Amsoil or not. Your pretty ignorant about oil, so I will just let you go about your simpleton ways concerning oil
Nancy Hagen you really don’t know shit about modern cars. Yeah way back in your dino days cars needed changes that often, not true in modern cars.
so, if u truly followed ur " rules " u changed ur oil & filter 100 times... if u had used AMSOIL signature series, & changed oil & filter @ 25,000 miles, u wood hav done so only 12 times...