LibertyCRD wrote:
A diesel engine draws in more air than a comparable gasoline engine because of the turbo charger among other things. Therefore aftermarket filters such as the K&N are an even worse idea for diesels than they are for gas engines. Would you guys say this is generally a true statement? Or are there actually some higher flowing filters on the market that are diesel safe??
In my experience, when using a k&n style filter on a turbo engine (gas) gains are ususually minimal to none because the turbo provides the need airflow. Non Turbo engines generally benifit more from better flowing air filters.
The same goes for changing the entire intake like with a cold air intake system that replaces the factory stuff with a nice smooth higher flowing pipe. Gains on turbo motors are alot less than non turbo motors.
The other piece of the puzzle is the engine rpm. high flow air filters/intakes make their power at higher rpms when the restriction on air flow is multiplied. This is why you see high revving honda motors get gains up near 10hp with a air intake system, but if you look at the power curve on a dyno chart, lower in the rpm range the power is usually none.
With a diesel the rpms are very low most of the time, probably another reason why the k&n air filters dont all that much. (speculation)
And like most k&n stlye filters, dirt into the motor is increased. Which if you change the oil every 3000 miles isn't all that bad. It just dosent seem worth it on a low reving turbo engine with very high oil change interval to gain maybe 1-2hp.
I had purchased a mopar performance air filter for our Liberty V6, we actually picked up 1mpg with it. But with the new 2006 CRD we're using the stock paper filter. You just need to change it often to keep it fresh.
My mopar performance filter is for sale if anyone wants it
