Does anyone know for a fact if the CVT side sucks in more air? I changed out the filters for K&N's and the air filter was much dirtier on the CVT side. The engine side looked almost new and the CVT side wasn't filthy, but definitely dirtier. way more bugs on the CVT side.
Yes, the CVT side sucks a great deal more air than the engine side. Not only do I think the max volume is greater on the CVT side. But it's sucking max volume nearly all the time. The engine side is only sucking max volume at wide open throttle at redline. Makes a great deal of sense. This is why I recommend that if you're going to switch just one side to a K&N, you do the CVT side.
There are a lot of misdirected rumors out there regarding the K&N filters and distributing oil down stream. But my experience, independent, scientific testing, and the evidence of actual usage say that this is not true.
When I picked my new Rally up, that was one of the things the service manager went over with me, that I should not confuse the CVT filer for the Air Filter and to check the CVT filter every few hundred miles and clean or replace it, there is a lot of air flowing through it and if the filter gets clogged it will overheat the CVT and lead to premature belt failure.
That is kinda funny about the filters distributing oil. I never heard that before. Some of the people I know who had engines built to their specs have K&N filters. I used them in my Trans am and my mustang.
On a side note, your end links were good today in the curves. Finally had a chance to test them out. Is it me, or is it normal to have a little more body roll but tighter (if that is the right word) steering. I need a day to get on the interstate and see how they handle the buffering from the rigs. The stocks ones were no bueno.
Ron, I got to ask this question, on the CVT side, are the clutches actually drawing air in to the space or are the filters getting dirty from the belt dust inside? Is the dirt on the inside or the outside?
Based on my snowmobile experience most of the "dirt" you see on the CVT filter is belt dust and not dirt being filtered out of incoming air. The CVT belt creates a lot of fine dust that coats everything it comes in contact with. Snowmobiles have an enclosure around the belt (no filter) and clutches and they get very dirty on the inside as does any area around the enclosure.
There are a lot of misdirected rumors out there regarding the K&N filters and distributing oil down stream. But my experience, independent, scientific testing, and the evidence of actual usage say that this is not true.
Since much of this thread seems to concern K&N filters, I suggest you read this report:
https://pdf.sciencedirectassets.com/282073/1-s2.0-S2212017316X00047/1-s2.0-S2212017316301475/main.pdf?X-Amz-Security-Token=IQoJb3JpZ2luX2VjEN%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2F%2FwEaCXVzLWVhc3QtMSJGMEQCIC4r3RyMxVF1WTMSDXbThSTqxTO2b2pHUosJYwYsWCBiAiADNcKTxMwdy7402zUoIkOpC6BP6pAuJCZBcZU7JrbElSr6AwgYEAQaDDA1OTAwMzU0Njg2NSIM%2FZBH%2BIqQOxJiRnuvKtcDXFkqbqWqhQtX%2BtSoUvrysxxANNO0o4d1XsVjjM23O%2FqyrL2Ph48%2B5xEDkCfc5FT4Y5Ilara7Lt0To%2F76uyKBWi0UcyJmWrTAPMeZgIH6Ik3LV1fyrFCriSH8d5QHNTW8o1GM%2Bi9PqrcqDBLP%2FX5irE6Nx8SB6bbKagA7%2Fy9szuVCH%2ByyJcDe0Tf13old95mtkGEkCXrl%2FDGn59CDMVuBz%2FKMZE1dRcmIrGXXvCUIsa09BaEWwpqCmG5AP6udFxq5jl5%2Ff%2Brq4q9IkUcM6VvcBKy8lIoLUNNIH9vSg80g3l3KHUjgpXWgrMbYDcmPZt3idgjuMx789WnyLU3PrOgC%2F6qMcPQ5cUUmCDeK1JpPyq004G9kfoJMaRnSdhVfnuxWjztlWQWcdIYt2G%2BGK%2FJLqmgKFboiJx9R6ZkV8CiiSrfVfNN4u5U0ZZJXXrWDl0CRcGB2ed5ZNF0ojudF%2B844X65KhCBc1F%2Bygp2VzRgpNpxgL%2BFcdsm18B5%2B%2F4TVRGCUjR648ONtwRwm7nZAK6H4JgZUQTcrGMnT1PgoIVFNemrtQQKPETj%2BlnU%2BZHumGZOsYMPYogGQMJDvpMqrS4neZ%2Bip6iwwUYVA40AjKWhHMGnlke4uYiuYMIffjokGOqYB4VS70Sqt5gPAkJmDKOdcWtpZ6K5YIxYn%2BmnPoJdj62V5C0vtjhyRKhVYVga5w5SFTmBOguOqufEsaj7pd03inSSkalj5J9P2XkzxcQJ7IqZjJekb%2Fmojbb7RSLtXQII2Scy4DYARBbrtETzKGY8oRsotNKnms8iJOdfAC3nA11fW3r6UFKJCrDzxSCpzHut%2BewLYUgIN9%2FI%2B8d7yxI0moiNJyN7Tng%3D%3D&X-Amz-Algorithm=AWS4-HMAC-SHA256&X-Amz-Date=20210823T153216Z&X-Amz-SignedHeaders=host&X-Amz-Expires=300&X-Amz-Credential=ASIAQ3PHCVTYVMYV2WG6%2F20210823%2Fus-east-1%2Fs3%2Faws4_request&X-Amz-Signature=19dc016aaf7422365045438559d0977b0e6ae12416e20a6c8076600d03c670cd&hash=251a900cf12eea27c39ba5ec3a4f58bd106735fd00ab12c4c5cb451037d1ae15&host=68042c943591013ac2b2430a89b270f6af2c76d8dfd086a07176afe7c76c2c61&pii=S2212017316301475&tid=spdf-ec039ac8-8d02-4915-8df2-5000a92ecc14&sid=a19b0e624a69c145d93a0cb1c39a1bc4fd36gxrqa&type=client
Unless you are competing, it looks like the decision to use an OEM style paper filter or the K&N type is largely a financial one.
BS
OK, so I'm surely not the sharpest knife in the drawer. A couple of things in the India engineering college study that ravenrest linked (post #13) that I'm having some trouble wrapping my head around:
1. A 5hp diesel engine is used in most of the tests.
2. Filter clogging is simulated by wrapping the filter(s) with tissue paper.
3. Only two of the tests (acceleration and fuel economy) appear to have been performed using recognized standards, and for those the K&N appears to have faired well.
4. The filtering efficiency test was...well...your guess is as good as mind.
Whenever I read engineering studies like this I always keep in mind the fact that every measurement contains error.