Air Filter Shootout Test - Results!
#1
Air Filter Shootout Test - Results!
First off, I want to thank MitsuStyle for purchasing the delicious White Castle we had for lunch and Modern Automotive Performance for donating the 3 hours of dyno time needed to complete this test. The test was performed on a AWD DynoJet. Peak boost was 29.0 plus/minus .5 psi for each filter. This test takes into account only power produced and in no way tested filtering ability.
CAR USED FOR TESTING
2005 Mitsubishi Evolution VIII GSR SSL
Evo IX turbo w/ported exhaust housing
E85 fuel (winter blend = 70% ethanol)
Buschur TBE w/testpipe
Buschur ported/coated exhaust manifold
Buschur coated SS o2 housing
Buschur Deluxe FMIC with Buschur LICP/UICP
Kelford 272 cams w/ GSC beehive springs
Evo IX BOV
Buschur intake pipe
Buschur ported IM/65mmTB
FIC 1050cc injectors
Walbro 255HP fuel pump
Buschur old air filter (dry, no longer available)
Tune with MAF scaling set for the Buschur filter
FILTERS TESTED
Buschur (old style, no longer available, old and rusty)
Perrin
Amsoil
Vibrant
K&N - FIPK
Apexi (note small filter inlet in 2nd picture)
K&N - small
no filter
RESULTS
Buschur: 378whp/361wtq (old style, no longer available)
Perrin: 376whp/345wtq
Amsoil: 374whp/344wtq
Vibrant: 371whp/351wtq (current style Buschur air filter)
K&N - FIPK: 369whp/355whp (comes with Typhoon intake kit)
Apexi: 367whp/357wtq
K&N - small: 367whp/346wtq (caused more knock than others)
no filter: 375whp/358wtq (not recommended to run filterless!)
CONCLUSION
The car's tune was properly setup and scaled for the old-style Buschur air filter so take those results with a grain of salt. Excluding the Buschur, the Perrin filter showed the highest peak whp which was ~10whp higher than the K&N's which CBRD noted a few months ago (thats the thread that spurred the idea for this filter test). The Amsoil filter was very close on Perrin's heels and considering their claims of being the best filtering air filter and very minimal maintenance (no oil, just blow out with air compressor to clean) it may be a very good choice for a street car. K&N's performance in this test was extremely disappointing especially since that is all they do! Apexi makes a good filter but the small inlet really hurt it in the test; this is their Evo kit and MAF adaptor and its really odd to me that they wouldn't use a filter with a larger flange. The runs without an air filter really go to show that at this power level a good performance air filter poses very little restriction. It is also interesting to note that the owner of this car, Scheides, has already ordered a Perrin air filter and Vibrant MAF adaptor to replace his old rusty Buschur air filter with. I will most likely be running a Perrin on my car, but I am still considering the Amsoil due to its filtering ability. I personally run a Vibrant on my car right now and the inside of my MAS is very dirty leading me to believe it does a very poor job filtering the incoming air.
Pardon the salt and dirt every where; its the middle if winter here in Minnesota and is impossible to keep anything clean.
MAP shop car (white VIII RS) & Scheides' car afterwards for lunch
-Chris Hughes
CAR USED FOR TESTING
2005 Mitsubishi Evolution VIII GSR SSL
Evo IX turbo w/ported exhaust housing
E85 fuel (winter blend = 70% ethanol)
Buschur TBE w/testpipe
Buschur ported/coated exhaust manifold
Buschur coated SS o2 housing
Buschur Deluxe FMIC with Buschur LICP/UICP
Kelford 272 cams w/ GSC beehive springs
Evo IX BOV
Buschur intake pipe
Buschur ported IM/65mmTB
FIC 1050cc injectors
Walbro 255HP fuel pump
Buschur old air filter (dry, no longer available)
Tune with MAF scaling set for the Buschur filter
FILTERS TESTED
Buschur (old style, no longer available, old and rusty)
Perrin
Amsoil
Vibrant
K&N - FIPK
Apexi (note small filter inlet in 2nd picture)
K&N - small
no filter
RESULTS
Buschur: 378whp/361wtq (old style, no longer available)
Perrin: 376whp/345wtq
Amsoil: 374whp/344wtq
Vibrant: 371whp/351wtq (current style Buschur air filter)
K&N - FIPK: 369whp/355whp (comes with Typhoon intake kit)
Apexi: 367whp/357wtq
K&N - small: 367whp/346wtq (caused more knock than others)
no filter: 375whp/358wtq (not recommended to run filterless!)
CONCLUSION
The car's tune was properly setup and scaled for the old-style Buschur air filter so take those results with a grain of salt. Excluding the Buschur, the Perrin filter showed the highest peak whp which was ~10whp higher than the K&N's which CBRD noted a few months ago (thats the thread that spurred the idea for this filter test). The Amsoil filter was very close on Perrin's heels and considering their claims of being the best filtering air filter and very minimal maintenance (no oil, just blow out with air compressor to clean) it may be a very good choice for a street car. K&N's performance in this test was extremely disappointing especially since that is all they do! Apexi makes a good filter but the small inlet really hurt it in the test; this is their Evo kit and MAF adaptor and its really odd to me that they wouldn't use a filter with a larger flange. The runs without an air filter really go to show that at this power level a good performance air filter poses very little restriction. It is also interesting to note that the owner of this car, Scheides, has already ordered a Perrin air filter and Vibrant MAF adaptor to replace his old rusty Buschur air filter with. I will most likely be running a Perrin on my car, but I am still considering the Amsoil due to its filtering ability. I personally run a Vibrant on my car right now and the inside of my MAS is very dirty leading me to believe it does a very poor job filtering the incoming air.
Pardon the salt and dirt every where; its the middle if winter here in Minnesota and is impossible to keep anything clean.
MAP shop car (white VIII RS) & Scheides' car afterwards for lunch
-Chris Hughes
Last edited by Kracka; Jan 7, 2009 at 08:52 AM.
#2
Taken from my old thread; please note the red generic filters would not fit my adapters so they could not be tested.
Here are a few quick pictures and initial impressions of some of the filters:
Perrin - generic - Amsoil - Vibrant
Perrin: Oiled foam type filter, massive surface area, came drenched in oil so I rubbed some of it off with paper towels, can't see daylight through filter.
generic cone: cotton gauze oiled filter, open top for more filtering area, looks to be very high in quality, can't see much daylight through filter leading me to believe it will filter decently, possible flange leakage as its not molded directly to the filter base.
Amsoil: Dry filter, easy cleaning with only an air compressor, extremely high quality in appearance, the best filtering air filter available according to Amsoil, open top with plastic internal velocity cone, I'm the most impressed with this filter.
Vibrant: Dry filter, good quality, open top for extra surface area, can practically see through the filter so I'm guessing this does nothing but keep bugs and birds out of your turbo.
K&N: The excess black rubber on the filtering media (oiled gauze cotton) really disturbs me, this does nothing but cut into the available surface area for filtering/airflow, is between the Vibrant and the generic filter in terms of light that can be seen through it, based on appearance only the K&N is the worst quality.
Here are a few quick pictures and initial impressions of some of the filters:
Perrin - generic - Amsoil - Vibrant
Perrin: Oiled foam type filter, massive surface area, came drenched in oil so I rubbed some of it off with paper towels, can't see daylight through filter.
generic cone: cotton gauze oiled filter, open top for more filtering area, looks to be very high in quality, can't see much daylight through filter leading me to believe it will filter decently, possible flange leakage as its not molded directly to the filter base.
Amsoil: Dry filter, easy cleaning with only an air compressor, extremely high quality in appearance, the best filtering air filter available according to Amsoil, open top with plastic internal velocity cone, I'm the most impressed with this filter.
Vibrant: Dry filter, good quality, open top for extra surface area, can practically see through the filter so I'm guessing this does nothing but keep bugs and birds out of your turbo.
K&N: The excess black rubber on the filtering media (oiled gauze cotton) really disturbs me, this does nothing but cut into the available surface area for filtering/airflow, is between the Vibrant and the generic filter in terms of light that can be seen through it, based on appearance only the K&N is the worst quality.
#3
Evolved Member
iTrader: (2)
Do you have logs of the tests, specifically baro?
Since the baro sensor is in the MAF, it's very easy to see which filter is the least restrictive by looking at the drop in baro measured at the MAF. The less drop, the less restrictive.
Since the baro sensor is in the MAF, it's very easy to see which filter is the least restrictive by looking at the drop in baro measured at the MAF. The less drop, the less restrictive.
Last edited by l2r99gst; Jan 3, 2009 at 01:58 PM.
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FROSTYQ (Apr 20, 2019)
#4
iTrader: (10)
Woot! What a blast! Tons and tons of dyno pulls and the car is running like a champ. It was a good time and I'm glad we finally put this test together. It was amazing to see how all the different filters performed by just swapping them out. I have logs from each and every pull we made today. AFR's were very consistent from filter to filter, and the only real curve ball was doing no filter at all; which made no more power than the higher performers. I'm glad to see my old rusty buschur filter holding up and performing like a champ; it's too bad the newer ones they are pimping do not perform the same as the old ones.
All in all I'm sure we'll keep adding info to this thread as time goes on. Please keep flaming to a minimum, we did what we could with what we had. Please take this test at face value. We have no hidden agenda or anything to gain from posting these results; just did it for fun! And of course, for the most powerful cars on the street
-scheides
owner, MitsuStyle.com
ps--special thanks to Modern Automotive Performance for donating the dyno time. If you're interested in any of the products featured here, contact them!
All in all I'm sure we'll keep adding info to this thread as time goes on. Please keep flaming to a minimum, we did what we could with what we had. Please take this test at face value. We have no hidden agenda or anything to gain from posting these results; just did it for fun! And of course, for the most powerful cars on the street
-scheides
owner, MitsuStyle.com
ps--special thanks to Modern Automotive Performance for donating the dyno time. If you're interested in any of the products featured here, contact them!
Last edited by scheides; Jan 3, 2009 at 02:04 PM.
#5
Former Sponsor
iTrader: (138)
Great testing man, thanks for the results.
I wonder if anyone will ever test performance and filtering though. The Perrin is the same material as the HKS which has been known to perform well but filter terribly. The Perrin also requires the oil for filtering opposed to the others that don't, so I guess by removing most of the oil you sacrifice filtering for performance.
None the less, great job!
I wonder if anyone will ever test performance and filtering though. The Perrin is the same material as the HKS which has been known to perform well but filter terribly. The Perrin also requires the oil for filtering opposed to the others that don't, so I guess by removing most of the oil you sacrifice filtering for performance.
None the less, great job!
#7
Coolant temp and air temp (at MAS) were all within the same normal operating range so those should not have effected the results at all.
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#10
Evolved Member
iTrader: (2)
We saved the logs from all the runs; I will ask Scheides' (since we used his laptop) if he logged that parameter and if so we'll post it.
Coolant temp and air temp (at MAS) were all within the same normal operating range so those should not have effected the results at all.
Coolant temp and air temp (at MAS) were all within the same normal operating range so those should not have effected the results at all.
The baro measurment is pretty straightforward though and shows the restriction of the filter.
Thanks
#12
Also, special thanks to OilDoc for supplying the Amsoil air filter and evoredy for donating the K&N air filters used! I'll also give a special no-thanks to Perrin for telling me they'd donate a filter but never actually sending one so I ended up buying one myself through MAP (thank you MAP!)
Scheides - Thanks for donating your car for the testing!
Zac - Thanks for supplying the Apexi filter and MAF adaptor!
Shawn - Thanks for supplying the K&N FIPK MAF adaptor!
Scheides - Thanks for donating your car for the testing!
Zac - Thanks for supplying the Apexi filter and MAF adaptor!
Shawn - Thanks for supplying the K&N FIPK MAF adaptor!
Last edited by Kracka; Jan 3, 2009 at 02:36 PM.
#14
Great testing man, thanks for the results.
I wonder if anyone will ever test performance and filtering though. The Perrin is the same material as the HKS which has been known to perform well but filter terribly. The Perrin also requires the oil for filtering opposed to the others that don't, so I guess by removing most of the oil you sacrifice filtering for performance.
None the less, great job!
I wonder if anyone will ever test performance and filtering though. The Perrin is the same material as the HKS which has been known to perform well but filter terribly. The Perrin also requires the oil for filtering opposed to the others that don't, so I guess by removing most of the oil you sacrifice filtering for performance.
None the less, great job!
Last edited by Kracka; Jan 3, 2009 at 02:46 PM.