a bike motor will last a while, depends on how its riden. reving a 250 four stroke to 13000 rpm while racing will mean the 4 times a year ill pull the head off and re-valve it and put new springs in. iv never had a problem with dust in the motor, i replaced rings and pistons because i was chasing the fine edge of performance, we were running race fuel, bigger cams, more comp, and raised the rev limiter, all this put lost of additional streess on the engine.ISUZUROVER wrote:People always bring this up....ADAM 26 wrote:i raced motocross for years, we always use foam filters. the best i found were twin air, as they are dual stage and they pull apart to clean both layers separatly.
every ride they were dirty and had to be cleaned. this enviroment could be compaired to that of being in convoy with a few trucks on a dirt road.
How long is an MX bike engine expected to last between rebuilds???
How long is a truck engine or mine vehicle engine expected to last between rebuilds?
ALL heavy duty, expensive (truck) engines run fibrous filters with pre-cleaners. None run foam or cotton gauze filters.
Have a read here:
http://www.aulro.com/afvb/technical-cha ... post681491
Foam filters weren't included in the test, but as I said, compared to past experiments I have done with them, they are usually relatively poor in both flow properties and filtration properties.
Not at all. In off-highway engines running a dual element filter, the first filter is the main filter. The 2nd filter is a "safety" filter which is only there in case something goes wrong with the primary filter. It is usually lower efficiency (not as good at collecting particles) than the primary filter.bazzle wrote:The 1st paper filter is just that a pre sizing filter, that is why there is a 2nd filter. :(GUte wrote:The second stage of the finer filter is always clean.ISUZUROVER wrote:GUte wrote: I have never seen any dust past these filters.
They are very cost effective but a bit more labour intensive.
Unless you do oil analysis there is no way to know if your filter is working. Particles which are passing an inefficient filter are too small to be collected in ducting.
I have not tested a finer filter, but other foam filters I have tested have performed VERY poorly.
You would get evidence of dust particles here if the first stage was not working.
The forestry machinery we run use a two stage paper filter as the dust can get past the first.
Paper FTW
Bazzle
If FF/unifilter elements are designed that way, then you wouldn't see any dust on the inner foam part under normal conditions - but this does not mean the primary element is working well.
then there is the buch basher 250, it will get reved to no way near limiter, which is set much lower anyway, mostly stock internals, it will last at least a few years without touching it.
a truck motor the has a red line of 3500-4500 @stock spec will have a much longer life expectancy. but you dont have to service them as offten as a bike.
in reguards to a foam filter they have to be oiled correctly, it not as easy as just slapin any old oil on there and away ya go.
if your chasing the fine edge for performance, the first thing to go is the old paper filter!