texasclouds
En-Route
It’s your funeral.
I think you can go every other oil change to change the filter on a known healthy engine.
I am not suggesting this for a high performance engine or engines not flown a lot.
You can remove it and let it drain a bit so you do change all the oil if you want to reuse it.
I do oil analysis and get that back in a week or so to help track metal in the oil.
I did run oil and filter to close to 100 hours in my last 0-320 right before I returned it as a core. I sent a oil sample for analysis and the metal numbers were all within averages.
The silicon numbers were from new valve cover gaskets...
I fly a lot and have been thinking of extending my 55 hr oil changes to maybe 65-70 hours?
I cut and inspect every filter at oil change. Luckily I have never found metal. I did find a few paint chips after reinstalling 4 cylinders on my old engine.
I have 2 more filters and then I am switching to Challenger reusable filters. I have used these type filters on racing engines. It is a very good filter.
View attachment 109794 View attachment 109795
I change the oil and filter every 3000 in my '71 Volvo. I attribute that to the fact I have 570,000 miles on the original engine.
Mobil one oil says something like they guarantee 15,000-20,000 miles between changes. I guess as long as you have enough oil that won’t be a huge problem. Anything else is bad luck.
Mobil one oil says something like they guarantee 15,000-20,000 miles between changes. I guess as long as you have enough oil that won’t be a huge problem. Anything else is bad luck.
I think its *** backwards to dump the oil and not change inspect the filter. I would rather change the filter and reuse the oil and believe that is the practice on extend oil intervals. Have a analysis done and swap the filter.
Why? Do you think the filter stops working after so many hours?
I didn't say it does, it will keep working until no more oil will pass through. A oil analysis will report the condition of the oil, but if the filters getting crap in it, you wont know. If you dump the oil at the regular interval and its clean, how do you know the filter isn't holding the debris.
On airplanes, the oil change interval is based on the amount of blowby that an air cooled engine has. This leads to compounds that, when mixed with water, create corrosive mixtures. So the oil gets changed often.
Car engines, especially ones in the last 25 - 30 years or so, don't have much blowby. So less corrosive compounds.
Both aircraft and auto oils have additives to boost the TBN (Total Base Number) that neutralize the acids. You can add this to your oil analysis to see if you are changing it to early or too late, or just right.
Autos also benefit from full synthetic oils to get the extended change internals. BTW, checking my average speeds, I average for the low 30s to maybe 40 MPH per tank. So a 15,000 mile change intervals is more than 375 hours between changes.
I think it is highly unlikely that you will have issues with skipping the filter change, every other oil change, on an aircraft engine. Although, as always, check your POH.
My Mooney allows 100 hours on oil changes, but the filter needs to be changed every 50 hours. I use 35 hour change intervals, so would be good with skipping the filter every other change.
All that said, I have plenty of filters, so will not be skipping any changes. They are available, you just have to look. And possibly wait. If you need one now, you may pay a premium price.
Gary, can you confirm the Challenger part number for your O-320 is: CP48103C
This is the one I'm going to get although the website is a bit confusing on it's application chart. I'm planning on switching to the Challenger for my next oil change but at least on the Spruce site, it's on backorder until October.
I think for me, in seriousness, the question isn't how much dirt is it trapping, it's "how soon do I want to know if my motor is making metal?" -- 100 hours seems like a long time to get meaningful warning.
If there was a way to inspect the element without destroying the can, that'd be a victory for re-use. Someone should come up with some sort of fine mesh screen that can be inspected periodically.
I use Quaker State 10W40 but it is hard to find here lately. Otherwise Pennzoil, both "high mileage". Synthetic, I have been told, will leak quickly past seals that have had nothing but organic oil for 51+ years.What oil are you using?
With a full synthetic, you can go much longer between changes.
I use Quaker State 10W40 but it is hard to find here lately. Otherwise Pennzoil, both "high mileage". Synthetic, I have been told, will leak quickly past seals that have had nothing but organic oil for 51+ years.
Aircraft engines have enormous tolerances compared to modern auto engines. We change the oil at 50 hours not because the oil is degraded but because it’s contaminated with combustion byproducts that never get to the oil in a auto engine. Don’t compare between the two.