Sorry missed this - it works to some extent. Filters can be classified into 2 types, depth filters and surface filters. A CAR/4x4/truck air filter is a depth filter, that means that the particles will collect in the depth of the media, rather than on the surface - only later, when the filter has collected a lot of dust, will it become a surface filter (when there is enough dust that the dust is doing the filtration rather than the filter) - but by this stage you will want to have changed your filter. Most commercial depth filters are not considered cleanable by compressed air, but some are washable.MightyMouse wrote: And BTW is reverse blowing with compressed air effective at removing these particles ?
Most industrial filters are surface filters, and they are designed to be cleaned over and over again (with compressed air). Interestingly, modern tanks have surface filters, with automated compressed air cleaning - you don't want to change your filter in the middle of a battlefield!!!
So - compressed air might remove 99.5% of the dust from a surface filter, but only 30% or so from a depth filter.
As to the manometers, I have a donaldson one fitted to my donaldson airbox. It is just a simple device that measures vacuum in the filter chamber (after the filter) vs atmospheric pressure. When the filter DP is too high, a red tag pops up - and it is time to change the filter.
Just checked the unifilter website - name change is interesting, mine definitely says finer filter (btw - as I said before - free to anyone who wants it - needs a new outer band but the inner is fine).
They claim they remove all particles above 4-5 micron. I think I will have to do some more filter testing as I find that VERY hard to believe.
http://www.uniflow.com.au/contents/en-u ... filter.pdf