<font color=blue>Just out of curiosity, how do you know that a fram, napa, wix ect... filter was engineered for a specific vehicle when one filter often fits many makes and models. Has
<font color=black>I think what he was getting at was that the modern filters were designed by the filter companies based on the specs that the vehicle and engine manufacturers are giving them, not that they were specifically designed for vehicle 'x'.
<font color=blue>anyone compared a Yanmar oil filter to the other brands that are often put on a Yanmar to see what the differences are. If they look the same, thread the same, and the gasket mates the same, other than the internal filter design, which often varies from one grade of filter to another, what's to say that the other brand filters may not actually Filter the oil better than the Yanmar filter
A common answer to this is a filtration test. Our oil company has performed this test for us in the past to aid in diagnoseing engine failures. An oil with suspended solids of different sizes is pumped independently through many different filters. The oil, and the filtration material can then be tested to see what micron size particles are passing or being retained. There are other aspects to the test as well.. moisture retention, and backpressure, and flow rate, and failure characteristics.
Personally, I like oem filters in some of my equipmentlike.. my tractor specifically...personal choice, but I would guess, that if the filter meets or exceeds manafacturer
specs.. it should be ok. Now all we need are the manufacturer specs for the yanmar filter, as designed in the 70's and 80's, and see if these current cross-overs meet those specs./w3tcompact/icons/smile.gif
Soundguy