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Oil filter 440/6

Started by boss429kiwi, September 11, 2015, 09:49:33 PM

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boss429kiwi

Hi

My shop insisted the correct replacement oil filter should be Fram TG42, which is the short stumpy filter, however the filter on the car is the longer PH8A and is the same as my 428CJ.

Does it matter? Running the shorter filter?

Cheers
Gary
NEW ZEALAND (aka Paradise)
1973 De Tomaso Pantera GTS widebody
1970 Superbird, 6pack, 4 speed, Tor-Red, Buckets, restored by Julius
1970 428 Cobra Jet, 4 speed, calypso Coral, white shaker
1970 Boss 429 KK2457, Concours, Calypso Coral (SOLD)
1957 Chevy truck, big rear window, ocean green, STOCK!.....nice!

daveco

PH8A is correct. Can't imagine how they are coming up with TG42.

I tried looking up the specs on a TG42 but could not find such a filter in the Fram spec book (available in .pdf on their website).
R/Tree

nascarxx29

PH 8A long filter is correct  And fram also had a PH43 mopar applications but a shorter filter            

never heard of TG 42 I assume fram line tough guard series

1969 R4 Daytona XX29L9B410772
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23UOA174597
1970 FY1 Superbird RM23UOA166242
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23VOA179697
1968 426 Road Runner RM21J8A134509
1970 Coronet RT WS23UOA224126
1970 Daytona Clone XP29GOG178701

Mopar Nut

Wix 51515 or Napa Gold 1515
"Dear God, my prayer for 2024 is a fat bank account and a thin body. Please don't mix these up like you did the last ten years."

boss429kiwi

NEW ZEALAND (aka Paradise)
1973 De Tomaso Pantera GTS widebody
1970 Superbird, 6pack, 4 speed, Tor-Red, Buckets, restored by Julius
1970 428 Cobra Jet, 4 speed, calypso Coral, white shaker
1970 Boss 429 KK2457, Concours, Calypso Coral (SOLD)
1957 Chevy truck, big rear window, ocean green, STOCK!.....nice!

daveco

A TG43 will work, just has less filtering capacity.
R/Tree

nascarxx29

TG 43  equiv to PH 43 both fram shorter filters
1969 R4 Daytona XX29L9B410772
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23UOA174597
1970 FY1 Superbird RM23UOA166242
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23VOA179697
1968 426 Road Runner RM21J8A134509
1970 Coronet RT WS23UOA224126
1970 Daytona Clone XP29GOG178701

boss429kiwi

It will work, without causing a problem or damage, that's the main thing.

Cheers
Gary
NEW ZEALAND (aka Paradise)
1973 De Tomaso Pantera GTS widebody
1970 Superbird, 6pack, 4 speed, Tor-Red, Buckets, restored by Julius
1970 428 Cobra Jet, 4 speed, calypso Coral, white shaker
1970 Boss 429 KK2457, Concours, Calypso Coral (SOLD)
1957 Chevy truck, big rear window, ocean green, STOCK!.....nice!

daveco

Still at a loss as to how it was decided that a *43 should be installed rather than a PH8a.
I couldn't find any truly useful information regarding the service characteristics of either filter.
Is the smaller filter good enough? ...probably, ...maybe, uh, based on what?
It is supposed to have a PH8a, why not just put the correct filter on.
R/Tree

62 Max


C500

Quote from: 62 Max on September 12, 2015, 03:51:32 PM
I myself wouldn't put a Fram filter on anything ! :Twocents:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XRRgw4B7R-I

:iagree: no frams going on my cars. Wix 51515 here.
"An aggressive exterior with power to match was enough to pull in the performance boys-especially when abetted by a pair of pipes blaring out the back, and brawny red-sidewall rubber hitting the pavement."  

"........the four speed box changes cogs with the precision of a sharp axe striking soft pine."

rainbow4jd

I do oil filter training - cutting up oil filters and looking at the insides.    What's unexpected is the Motorcraft is the best filter available period.

1) All metal sealed end caps
2) Synthetic filter material
3) Top mounted mechanical bypass valve
4) All metal center stand tube
5) Even and numerous pleats
6) Silicon anti-drain back gasket

THE FRAM IS THE FREAKING WORST!

1) Paper end caps
2) Paper material
3) Open bypass thru center stand tube
4) Plastic bird cage center stand tube
5) Irregular pleating
6) Rubber anti-drain back gaskets

Everything else is in between the two.   Even more expensive Mobil and Puralators aren't as good as the Motorcraft (with their principal faults being dome end bypass valves which means you suck up crap from the dome end whenever you do a cold start and the filter is in bypass)

Note:  At roughly 40 degrees F or below 90% of all oils are too thick to pass through the filter paper, so filters go into bypass mode for about 60 - 120 seconds until the oil warms up.  It's the pancake syrup in the fridgerator syndrome - so knowing HOW a filter operates in bypass is critically important to engine life.

PS If we can only get a Mopar decal package to cover up the Motorcraft!

talkiemopar

My 92 ford 300-cu-in-straight-6 took the same oil filter as my bird--PH8A-fram.  Rick.   :Twocents: :Twocents:

Mopar Nut

"Dear God, my prayer for 2024 is a fat bank account and a thin body. Please don't mix these up like you did the last ten years."

C500

Quote from: rainbow4jd on September 12, 2015, 05:20:19 PM
I do oil filter training - cutting up oil filters and looking at the insides.    What's unexpected is the Motorcraft is the best filter available period.

1) All metal sealed end caps
2) Synthetic filter material
3) Top mounted mechanical bypass valve
4) All metal center stand tube
5) Even and numerous pleats
6) Silicon anti-drain back gasket

THE FRAM IS THE FREAKING WORST!

1) Paper end caps
2) Paper material
3) Open bypass thru center stand tube
4) Plastic bird cage center stand tube
5) Irregular pleating
6) Rubber anti-drain back gaskets

Everything else is in between the two.   Even more expensive Mobil and Puralators aren't as good as the Motorcraft (with their principal faults being dome end bypass valves which means you suck up crap from the dome end whenever you do a cold start and the filter is in bypass)

Note:  At roughly 40 degrees F or below 90% of all oils are too thick to pass through the filter paper, so filters go into bypass mode for about 60 - 120 seconds until the oil warms up.  It's the pancake syrup in the fridgerator syndrome - so knowing HOW a filter operates in bypass is critically important to engine life.

PS If we can only get a Mopar decal package to cover up the Motorcraft!

Excellent info rainbow,  from someone who knows these things first hand..... next filter I buy will be Motorcraft  :2thumbs: :2thumbs:
"An aggressive exterior with power to match was enough to pull in the performance boys-especially when abetted by a pair of pipes blaring out the back, and brawny red-sidewall rubber hitting the pavement."  

"........the four speed box changes cogs with the precision of a sharp axe striking soft pine."

rainbow4jd

Quote from: C500 on September 13, 2015, 01:35:28 AM
Quote from: rainbow4jd on September 12, 2015, 05:20:19 PM
I do oil filter training - cutting up oil filters and looking at the insides.    What's unexpected is the Motorcraft is the best filter available period.

1) All metal sealed end caps
2) Synthetic filter material
3) Top mounted mechanical bypass valve
4) All metal center stand tube
5) Even and numerous pleats
6) Silicon anti-drain back gasket

THE FRAM IS THE FREAKING WORST!

1) Paper end caps
2) Paper material
3) Open bypass thru center stand tube
4) Plastic bird cage center stand tube
5) Irregular pleating
6) Rubber anti-drain back gaskets

Everything else is in between the two.   Even more expensive Mobil and Puralators aren't as good as the Motorcraft (with their principal faults being dome end bypass valves which means you suck up crap from the dome end whenever you do a cold start and the filter is in bypass)

Note:  At roughly 40 degrees F or below 90% of all oils are too thick to pass through the filter paper, so filters go into bypass mode for about 60 - 120 seconds until the oil warms up.  It's the pancake syrup in the fridgerator syndrome - so knowing HOW a filter operates in bypass is critically important to engine life.

PS If we can only get a Mopar decal package to cover up the Motorcraft!

Excellent info rainbow,  from someone who knows these things first hand..... next filter I buy will be Motorcraft  :2thumbs: :2thumbs:


If I knew how to size pictures I could post some cutaways.    Basically I use a pipe saw and cut them apart then put them in plastic display cases and haul them around with me.   I've got about 20 or so.   Everything from a 99 cent BIG LOTS "Valuecraft Brand" to I think a $12.00 Puralotor or maybe it was the Mobile.    By the way - the Valuecraft was EXACTLY identical to a Valvoline!  Go figure (that's why they have those Valvoline instant oil changes for $19.99 I guess)

The Motorcraft is a weird deal because the Ford dealer's jack you around on the price.   They want full list, which is about $8.00 bucks, but they only cost the dealer about $3.00 when they buy them in bulk from Ford.   Occasionally, Walmart or O'Reillys will by like 20 freight cars of Motorcraft and then have them on their shelves in the $5.00 range.

The other thing is that Ford has an "over the counter" sales incentive for the Dealer - to be able to do a "cash and carry special" - but the stupid Ford dealer parts managers don't even know about this incentive or are too lazy to look it up.   It's bizarre because they can't give you that deal if THEY change the oil on your car.  It's a special incentive just for folks that do their own oil changes.  I guess its designed to help the Ford dealers compete with Autozones and NAPAs.    But, if you find a pretty sharp Ford parts manager that would rather make a little money than NO money - you should be able to negotiate the price to about $5.00 - which is about a buck more than some of the other filters like a NAPA gold etc. etc. etc.  And if you think about it "a buck" to put a good quality filter in a $40,000 or $50,000 car - why do we even worry about a "good deal".  Just buy a good part!

ALL THAT BEING SAID - HERE'S WHAT YOU REALLY NEED TO KNOW....

There are two things going on - filtration and aging of the oil.   

The aging means HOW LONG or HOW MUCH dirt will the oil actually suspend in solution and carry to the filter for filtration.  That is accomplished through a package of additives call surfactants.  (Think SURF brand clothing detergent).    The additive package is UNIQUE to every brand of oil.   An oil chemist can test oil and tell you the brand name solely based on the ingredients in the additive package.     Once the oil saturates with dirt or the additive package ages out - you get sludge.  The dirt drops out and starts to catch and linger in every cranny of the engine and then starts to absorb MORE of the same crap until basically you oil starve and engine and it burns up.  (Note: oil also has a coolant function)

Old non-synthetic - crude oil - original MOPAR oil from the 1960s and 70s - degraded at around 4,000 miles or 4 to 6 months.   That's where the entire concept of "change your oil every 3,000 miles" came from.   The oil was only good for that long.  Modern oils - of a semi-synthetic nature - give you anywhere from about 6,000 miles to 12,000 miles of surfactant life and about a 12 to 18 months of normal heat life (if you're driving low miles).     So the once a year oil change using a semi-synthetic is a perfectly good deal or about 6,000 miles.

NOW - let's talk filters.   The issues for filters is "will they filter as long as the oil life".   That's the issue with cheap filters.   They usually have about 4,000 to 6,000 miles of filtration life before the get clogged up and it goes into by-pass mode.  WHICH MEANS IF YOU CHANGE YOUR OIL EVERY 3000 MILES YOU CAN USE A CHEAP ASS FILTER!   Because basically you are over-changing the oil (or prematurely changing the oil) - which costs a lot more than the filter.   So you waste money - but you save $2.00 by putting a cheap-ass filter on.   The point is - match the filter to the life of the oil.

Most factory filters - OE brands (like Motorcraft) are designed by the manufacturer to last the LONGER oil life - because they are going to the "oil test" determinant for when to change the oil (the computer in the car monitors the oil to determine when "chemically" it's needed.)   So the reason they give you a really good filter (OE) is because of warranty.  They don't want a filter that clogs up at 6,000 miles and then kills an engine because the oil (which is all they test) could go to 12,000 miles.

That being said - the Motorcraft OE is better designed than the AC Delco and (shame on me) I've NOT cut open a recent Mopar brand filter.   (In part, because my car hasn't been running for about 10 years - not that the motors bad but the car has been in slow restoration)

Anyway - I guess that's the general lesson in oil filters and oil filtration.

Hope this was helpful.

nascarxx29

 :Twocents:.Hands down the FL1A ford oil filter is better.Not only that I don't prefer to use champion J11ys period spark plugs .I used the Autolite 85 spark plugs with better results. If Im not mistaken the mopar used Dana 60 was a ford truck rear platform piece.And we can thank ford by pushing the need to beat the talladega with a purpose built mopar aero car
1969 R4 Daytona XX29L9B410772
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23UOA174597
1970 FY1 Superbird RM23UOA166242
1970 EV2 Superbird RM23VOA179697
1968 426 Road Runner RM21J8A134509
1970 Coronet RT WS23UOA224126
1970 Daytona Clone XP29GOG178701

Troy

Quote from: rainbow4jd on September 13, 2015, 04:12:14 PM
Quote from: C500 on September 13, 2015, 01:35:28 AM
Quote from: rainbow4jd on September 12, 2015, 05:20:19 PM
I do oil filter training - cutting up oil filters and looking at the insides.    What's unexpected is the Motorcraft is the best filter available period.

1) All metal sealed end caps
2) Synthetic filter material
3) Top mounted mechanical bypass valve
4) All metal center stand tube
5) Even and numerous pleats
6) Silicon anti-drain back gasket

THE FRAM IS THE FREAKING WORST!

1) Paper end caps
2) Paper material
3) Open bypass thru center stand tube
4) Plastic bird cage center stand tube
5) Irregular pleating
6) Rubber anti-drain back gaskets

Everything else is in between the two.   Even more expensive Mobil and Puralators aren't as good as the Motorcraft (with their principal faults being dome end bypass valves which means you suck up crap from the dome end whenever you do a cold start and the filter is in bypass)

Note:  At roughly 40 degrees F or below 90% of all oils are too thick to pass through the filter paper, so filters go into bypass mode for about 60 - 120 seconds until the oil warms up.  It's the pancake syrup in the fridgerator syndrome - so knowing HOW a filter operates in bypass is critically important to engine life.

PS If we can only get a Mopar decal package to cover up the Motorcraft!

Excellent info rainbow,  from someone who knows these things first hand..... next filter I buy will be Motorcraft  :2thumbs: :2thumbs:


If I knew how to size pictures I could post some cutaways.    Basically I use a pipe saw and cut them apart then put them in plastic display cases and haul them around with me.   I've got about 20 or so.   Everything from a 99 cent BIG LOTS "Valuecraft Brand" to I think a $12.00 Puralotor or maybe it was the Mobile.    By the way - the Valuecraft was EXACTLY identical to a Valvoline!  Go figure (that's why they have those Valvoline instant oil changes for $19.99 I guess)

The Motorcraft is a weird deal because the Ford dealer's jack you around on the price.   They want full list, which is about $8.00 bucks, but they only cost the dealer about $3.00 when they buy them in bulk from Ford.   Occasionally, Walmart or O'Reillys will by like 20 freight cars of Motorcraft and then have them on their shelves in the $5.00 range.

The other thing is that Ford has an "over the counter" sales incentive for the Dealer - to be able to do a "cash and carry special" - but the stupid Ford dealer parts managers don't even know about this incentive or are too lazy to look it up.   It's bizarre because they can't give you that deal if THEY change the oil on your car.  It's a special incentive just for folks that do their own oil changes.  I guess its designed to help the Ford dealers compete with Autozones and NAPAs.    But, if you find a pretty sharp Ford parts manager that would rather make a little money than NO money - you should be able to negotiate the price to about $5.00 - which is about a buck more than some of the other filters like a NAPA gold etc. etc. etc.  And if you think about it "a buck" to put a good quality filter in a $40,000 or $50,000 car - why do we even worry about a "good deal".  Just buy a good part!

ALL THAT BEING SAID - HERE'S WHAT YOU REALLY NEED TO KNOW....

There are two things going on - filtration and aging of the oil.   

The aging means HOW LONG or HOW MUCH dirt will the oil actually suspend in solution and carry to the filter for filtration.  That is accomplished through a package of additives call surfactants.  (Think SURF brand clothing detergent).    The additive package is UNIQUE to every brand of oil.   An oil chemist can test oil and tell you the brand name solely based on the ingredients in the additive package.     Once the oil saturates with dirt or the additive package ages out - you get sludge.  The dirt drops out and starts to catch and linger in every cranny of the engine and then starts to absorb MORE of the same crap until basically you oil starve and engine and it burns up.  (Note: oil also has a coolant function)

Old non-synthetic - crude oil - original MOPAR oil from the 1960s and 70s - degraded at around 4,000 miles or 4 to 6 months.   That's where the entire concept of "change your oil every 3,000 miles" came from.   The oil was only good for that long.  Modern oils - of a semi-synthetic nature - give you anywhere from about 6,000 miles to 12,000 miles of surfactant life and about a 12 to 18 months of normal heat life (if you're driving low miles).     So the once a year oil change using a semi-synthetic is a perfectly good deal or about 6,000 miles.

NOW - let's talk filters.   The issues for filters is "will they filter as long as the oil life".   That's the issue with cheap filters.   They usually have about 4,000 to 6,000 miles of filtration life before the get clogged up and it goes into by-pass mode.  WHICH MEANS IF YOU CHANGE YOUR OIL EVERY 3000 MILES YOU CAN USE A CHEAP ASS FILTER!   Because basically you are over-changing the oil (or prematurely changing the oil) - which costs a lot more than the filter.   So you waste money - but you save $2.00 by putting a cheap-ass filter on.   The point is - match the filter to the life of the oil.

Most factory filters - OE brands (like Motorcraft) are designed by the manufacturer to last the LONGER oil life - because they are going to the "oil test" determinant for when to change the oil (the computer in the car monitors the oil to determine when "chemically" it's needed.)   So the reason they give you a really good filter (OE) is because of warranty.  They don't want a filter that clogs up at 6,000 miles and then kills an engine because the oil (which is all they test) could go to 12,000 miles.

That being said - the Motorcraft OE is better designed than the AC Delco and (shame on me) I've NOT cut open a recent Mopar brand filter.   (In part, because my car hasn't been running for about 10 years - not that the motors bad but the car has been in slow restoration)

Anyway - I guess that's the general lesson in oil filters and oil filtration.

Hope this was helpful.
I can send you a used SRT filter if you want. It would be interesting to see what they're made of. They seem to be highly regarded - and they ain't cheap!

Troy
Sarcasm detector, that's a real good invention.

c00nhunterjoe

I ran motorcraft filters for years on everything until i switched to k&n

thehemikid

Quit using Fram's ~ 30 yrs ago after seeing one cut open. :hah: :o :RantExplode: :icon_smile_blackeye:

BS27R1B

Have you cut open an old Mopar filter?
Since many restored cars are running these old filters it would be interesting to find out how these old parts compare.
' objects in the rear view mirror may appear closer than they are'

66FBCharger

'69 Charger R/T 440 4 speed T5, '70 Road Runner 440+6 4 speed, '73 'Cuda 340 4 speed, '66 Charger 383 Auto
SOLD!:'69 Charger R/T S.E. 440 4 speed 3.54 Dana rolling body

moparstuart

I only use these    :icon_smile_big:
GO SELL CRAZY SOMEWHERE ELSE WE ARE ALL STOCKED UP HERE

Aero426

The Wix filters have been touted as a very high quality filter for several years.   The NAPA versions show the exploded view in their displays.    How is the Motorcraft filter better? 

odcics2

What about water retention?  MoPar has an OEM spec for that... 
I've never owned anything but a MoPar. Can you say that?