Corvus wrote:nab 301 wrote:I think this link was posted here before , it relates to cars and was really a comparison of paper media over foam and cotton gauze filters.
The conclusion was ( I think) that paper was the best filtering medium with marginally more pressure drop..
http://www.bobistheoilguy.com/airfilter/airtest1.htm
That's the thing with filters and efficiency. You can have efficiency of filtering particles or efficiency of flowing air. You can have both if you have the space.
There are cyclonic filters which use oil and centrifugal force to extract particles but these are usually larger still. The good news for motorcycles is that the airbox has become a "tuned" component in its own right and it's demands for volume in return for performance gains seem to be well worth it?
Will a filter shape interfere with the pressure pulses?
K&N type filters - do the job by adherence of the particles to the fillament which is coated with oil. As such - there is little or no progressive restriction by particulate.
Paper filters - do the job by nature of the holes in the filter being of lesser diameter than the particulate they are designed to stop. As time goes on - they become increasingly blocked to efficient air flow.
The use of a large "can-type" K&N filter (compared to the smaller "panel" type - on a bike like the R1100s - is better, but mostly - in the time between cleaning.
I say "mostly" because it may also prevent some larger debris from blocking the filter area, although to what extent - could be argued.
Some people may claim that leaves etc will lie accross the filter element on a panel-type filter whereas they will sit on the bottom of a can-type filter, and not block the element. I think in reality that leaves may be picked up off the bottom of the can, and end up deposited against the element, due to the turbulence in the filter. Wet leaves don't stay wet in such an air-flow.
Anyway - the above is my opinion, only - not based upon any scientific experimentation I have carried out.
From K&N
Al