Bill Williams wrote:
I must chime in here, sorry. I have not figured out why some one would put an UN approved car filter on their 30 thousand dollar investment to save 5 bucks. I guess is Experimental ..........
In my case, I tried to explain it , Bill. Nothing was available in a direct-mounted spin-on adapter, or short enough filters at the time. Lycoming filters didn't have built-in bypass (guess I could've used a Continental filter). Did the testing, found out the filter chosen actually had greater filter surface area than the aircraft unit, and construction & burst strength were equal or better. Plus, it was a pretty cool thing to "build your own" like I did. You know all about that with some of the things you have done with your Thorp... these are "Experimental" machines. Additionally, my filter set-up has worked beautifully for over 20 years, and I've saved weight, eliminated extra hoses & additional potential leaks, have more space in my engine compartment, and had much cleaner oil changes than the Lycoming horizontally oriented unit allowed at the time. My engine seems to like it - it still uses a quart of oil in 25 hours after over 1200 hours, and I like it too. I saw guys using what I considered to be inferior filters, and decided to do it "right". It wasn't just to save 5 bucks a shot (it was a lot more than that at the time), but that was an additional advantage... sort of like you using those antique, "boat-anchor" magnetos. Sorry, but I'm kind of proud of it and using the filter that I do. Oh, and by the way, I bought my brand-new engine from Lycoming through Dick Wagner at Wag-Aero for $5,140.