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fram oil filter

Started by metcoll, May 23, 2008, 01:20:38 PM

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RD

fram filters are good for daily drivers, but with higher oil pressures, the frams just dont cut the mustard.  they may work, but when have you bought cheap insurance for your car and thought, you know they may work, but.... hence people using hagerty for their musclecars for that "added" insurance.

i would use a fram if i had to, but not on start up, and only intermittently.  i just like the added insurance of knowing that the filter I am using has a metal filter casing instead of being held together by two flimsy circle shaped cardboard styled retainers.  the casing will, at least, hold the major parts of the filter element inside the casing, whereas rather than having it get stuck in my oil pump if there was any filter failure.

is 2-3 dollars worth the extra insurance?  well, only you can decide that, but i would rather spend an extra $100 in one year on filters than kicking myself in the butt for spending 3K on a new rebuild.
67 Plymouth Barracuda, 69 Plymouth Barracuda, 73 Charger SE, 75 D100, 80 Sno-Commander

Rolling_Thunder

Fram filters - i have used them for years without problems...    but these are on daily drivers...     my Charger usually got K&N filters due to my excessive driving habits.
1968 Dodge Charger - 6.1L Hemi / 6-speed / 3.55 Sure Grip

2013 Dodge Challenger R/T - 5.7L Hemi / 6-speed / 3.73 Limited Slip

1964 Dodge Polara 500 - 440 / 4-speed / 3.91 Sure Grip

1973 Dodge Challenger Rallye - 340 / A-518 / 3.23 Sure Grip

Runner

Quote from: John_Kunkel on May 24, 2008, 04:16:13 PM
Quote from: ACUDANUT on May 24, 2008, 11:16:50 AM
I have never had or heard of Fram being junk ???

Here's how it works, a hack does an eyeball evaluation of Fram filters and proclaims them substandard, posts that on the internet and everybody who ever had a problem that they claim is related to the Fram filter jumps in and the result is predictable.

Of course, the millions of satisfied Fram users are never heard from, only the negatives get passed on.

john this is how i formed my opinion of fram filters.  the first was a ph8a filter from back in the mid 80s when i was about 20 years old driving down the road with my dad and the filter split apart with 70 psi right after an oil change and dumped all 5 quarts in a mater  of a couple seconds. the second was in the early 90s when i changed the oil on my wifes daily driver and it had a horrible leak from where the filter top and the case come together. it leaked a about 2 quarts in a couple minutes.      2  faulty filters from fram was enough for me and i switched to wix sence id rather not split another filter.  mabe they are better now, and mabe ive been unlucky but ill be damend if ill put another fram oil filter on anything i own.

71 roadrunner 452 e heads  11.35@119 mph owned sence 1984
72 panther pink satellite sebring plus 383 727
68 satellite 383 4 speed  13.80 @ 102 mph  my daily driver
69 superbee clone 440    daughters car
72 dodge dart swinger slant six

John_Kunkel

Quote from: Runner on May 26, 2008, 08:29:58 PM
john this is how i formed my opinion of fram filters.  the first was a ph8a filter from back in the mid 80s when i was about 20 years old driving down the road with my dad and the filter split apart with 70 psi right after an oil change and dumped all 5 quarts in a mater of a couple seconds.

Like I said, failures get more notice than successes.

When you can cite an accurate statistic of how many Fram filters have been placed in service versus the number that failed, those failure percentages are what condemnation should be based on; not individual anecdotes.

Hell, I've blown up a couple of Mopar motors, shredded rear ends, etc. Does that mean Mopars are "junk"? If I thought that I wouldn't keep buying them and I wouldn't be here.

Pardon me but my karma just ran over your dogma.

ACUDANUT

john this is how i formed my opinion of fram filters.  the first was a ph8a filter from back in the mid 80s when i was about 20 years old driving down the road with my dad and the filter split apart with 70 psi right after an oil change and dumped all 5 quarts in a mater  of a couple seconds. the second was in the early 90s when i changed the oil on my wifes daily driver and it had a horrible leak from where the filter top and the case come together. it leaked a about 2 quarts in a couple minutes.      2  faulty filters from fram was enough for me and i switched to wix sence id rather not split another filter.  mabe they are better now, and mabe ive been unlucky but ill be damend if ill put another fram oil filter on anything i own.

SO WHY DIDN'T YOU SUE THEM ???  BETTER YET, why are they still in business ??

Runner

Quote from: ACUDANUT on May 27, 2008, 06:39:08 PM
SO WHY DIDN'T YOU SUE THEM ???  BETTER YET, why are they still in business ??

  are you serious? why didnt i sue them?     first off, it would cost me  alot more to file even in small claims court to recover the 3 dollars for the filter and the 5 bucks for the oil.  the second failure i had the parts store gave me my money back on the filter and replaced the oil, so nothing really to sue for there,  mabe time?.  im really not a sue people type person.  i guess you would sue someone over 8 dollars?   lol   

    why is fram still in business you ask? well id guess they are still in business because they are a profitable company, isnt that how companys stay afloat?    i really doubt the loss of me as an oil filter customer hurt thier bottom line.

  john ,  the only stat i have is 2 failed filters for me, that stat is enough for me not to run them.  i dont thing your analogy of mopars is fair. a fair analogy would be ive used mopar performance engine paint a few times, but ive had a couple cans that wouldnt spray when new and i really didnt care for the way it covers so i now use dupicolor becasue it covers much better and the cans always seem to work.       im guessing you probably dont believe me about my filters. and thats ok  its your choice. but let me ask you this,   lets say you personally had 1 filter blow about and another leak, would you continue to use that brand of filter or would switch to another brand?

71 roadrunner 452 e heads  11.35@119 mph owned sence 1984
72 panther pink satellite sebring plus 383 727
68 satellite 383 4 speed  13.80 @ 102 mph  my daily driver
69 superbee clone 440    daughters car
72 dodge dart swinger slant six

RallyeMike

After reading the crap talk about Fram, I purchased a PH8A and several other types, cut them apart and checked it out for myself. It doesnt take a genius to see that the Frams are built with inexpensive materials. Probably fine for most every day use, but not on my cars.
1969 Charger 500 #232008
1972 Charger, Grand Sport #41
1973 Charger "T/A"

Drive as fast as you want to on a public road! Click here for info: http://www.sscc.us/

ACUDANUT

 I would buy about 5 of them myself and do that, BUT I can't even afford one right now.  :smilielol:

RD

Quote from: RallyeMike on May 28, 2008, 12:29:13 AM
After reading the crap talk about Fram, I purchased a PH8A and several other types, cut them apart and checked it out for myself. It doesnt take a genius to see that the Frams are built with inexpensive materials. Probably fine for most every day use, but not on my cars.

i have worked for a couple of autoparts stores and have done the same thing to all the filters we sold... hence i came to the same deduction
67 Plymouth Barracuda, 69 Plymouth Barracuda, 73 Charger SE, 75 D100, 80 Sno-Commander

John_Kunkel

Quote from: RallyeMike on May 28, 2008, 12:29:13 AM
After reading the crap talk about Fram, I purchased a PH8A and several other types, cut them apart and checked it out for myself. It doesnt take a genius to see that the Frams are built with inexpensive materials. Probably fine for most every day use, but not on my cars.

My career has been in the aviation field where it has long been common practice to cut filters open at each oil change, remove the filter media and inspect for metal, etc.

Since I have a dedicated filter cutter and some aircraft use the same 3/4"-16 thread as the Mopar/Ford I have been cutting used Frams open for years and regardless of their crumby internal appearance they do the job. The cheap cardboard end cap that gets the bad rap does its job and keeps the element centered even when exposed to hot oil.

Rather than an "eyball" evaluation that most so-called studies perform I'd be more impressed with real world flow studies, etc.
Pardon me but my karma just ran over your dogma.

r73mopar

i used t know a guy that worked at aplace that made fram filters, and he said they take the left over crap and shove it into a fram can and then seal it up. i used to use fram all the time until he told me this. now i spend the extra money and buy mopar filters for everthing i drive now. i built a 318 for a truck and used a fram , did the break in and lost oil pressure guess what it was the filter. changed it ran about 200 miles did it again. put mopar filter on never had a problem again!!!!!!!!!!!! :rotz: :shruggy:

RallyeMike

QuoteMy career has been in the aviation field where it has long been common practice to cut filters open at each oil change, remove the filter media and inspect for metal, etc.

Since I have a dedicated filter cutter and some aircraft use the same 3/4"-16 thread as the Mopar/Ford I have been cutting used Frams open for years and regardless of their crumby internal appearance they do the job. The cheap cardboard end cap that gets the bad rap does its job and keeps the element centered even when exposed to hot oil.

Rather than an "eyball" evaluation that most so-called studies perform I'd be more impressed with real world flow studies, etc.

I'll put one on my slant 6 if they are on sale, but not the race car.

I remember that Fram used to have the best tested oil filtration/flow of any brand (1980's controlled test data). Not sure where they stand these days? Flow/filtration is great but...... but ever seen test results on blowout or otherwise catastrophic failure? Probably not, because in general it wouldnt sell filters .

Ever run a Fram at 5000 rpm/120-165 mph for an hour on a stout oil pump with the added restriction of an oil cooler? Me either, and I don't plan on being the crash test dummy. In the absence of real testing for catastrophic failure, my "eyeball evaluation" is the best data I have, and I'd say it's not a bad choice to NOT run "cheap cardboard end cap" Fram in my application. I don't care if Fram traps paticles 1.5% better or whatever. I just want a filter that filter/flows good, is made of quality materials, and has a limited chance of self-destruction.

What's the lovefest on Fram about anyway?, Is your stock tanking?  :nana:
1969 Charger 500 #232008
1972 Charger, Grand Sport #41
1973 Charger "T/A"

Drive as fast as you want to on a public road! Click here for info: http://www.sscc.us/

RD

QuoteWhat's the lovefest on Fram about anyway?, Is your stock tanking? 

you have to admit that was funny :D  thanks mike, gave me a good laugh
67 Plymouth Barracuda, 69 Plymouth Barracuda, 73 Charger SE, 75 D100, 80 Sno-Commander

RallyeMike

Hopefully we are all laughing together. I actually have used Fram for 25 years (based on those old test results) and still do on some cars. Never had a problem with them for it's worth.
1969 Charger 500 #232008
1972 Charger, Grand Sport #41
1973 Charger "T/A"

Drive as fast as you want to on a public road! Click here for info: http://www.sscc.us/

my73charger

I have to say I did have an oil pump quit on me once and it had a Fram filter on it at the time.  Don't know if there is any connection though.  I always buy a Wix for my 440.

Blown70

Well, to me anyone can run what they want John K., likes his fram he is free to use them,  They will come no where near my cars.  I am just as free to have my formed opinion as Jonny is to his.  My opinion is the one that matters to me so I will go with that. :nana:

Tom

John_Kunkel

Quote from: RallyeMike on May 28, 2008, 10:12:51 PMWhat's the lovefest on Fram about anyway?, Is your stock tanking?  :nana:

I was waiting for that one.  ::)

No love affair, I just don't put much store in eyeball evaluations and anecdotal experiences and neither does the scientific community.
Pardon me but my karma just ran over your dogma.

Ghoste

Then again, there is an awful lot that the scientific community can't agree about even amongst themselves.  For me, the price of a filter versus the price of an engine leaves me perfectly happy to utilize anecdotal evidence and not run Fram filters.  I've used a great deal of anecdotal evidence from this site for advice on a wide range of things.

Charger74SE

I never had a problem with a FRAM filter when I had a high pressure oil pump on my 318 engine but I had to go to a PH43 filter to clear the headers. Only problem I did have was with the rubber gasket behind the adapter plate blowing out. I made a gasket out of some high pressure steam gasket paper to fix that.



2012 Charger SE
1974 Charger SE
USAF and A&P mechanic retired.

John_Kunkel

Quote from: Ghoste on May 29, 2008, 07:23:46 PM
Then again, there is an awful lot that the scientific community can't agree about even amongst themselves.  For me, the price of a filter versus the price of an engine leaves me perfectly happy to utilize anecdotal evidence and not run Fram filters.  I've used a great deal of anecdotal evidence from this site for advice on a wide range of things.

Exactly which anecdotal evidence on this subject on this site are you are you basing your choice on?

In this thread, what is the actual count of failures experienced versus satisfied users versus "I heard they're junk"?
Pardon me but my karma just ran over your dogma.

Ghoste

As far as which anecdotal evidence, unless you've experienced it personally I'd be inclined to say that every single thing you read on the internet is anecdotal so take your pick.  There comes a point where you apply faith, trust, instinct or whatever you want to call it to the things you read or hear.  You are absolutely right John, there are only a couple of people who "claim" real world failures and a few more who "heard" they were bad and years and years and thousands and thousands of happy satisfied Fram users to dispel it.  I have decided to put my trust in the handful of real world "claims" no matter how dubious or scientifically unsound or statistically unreliable they may be because switching brands seems much better easier and cheaper to me in this case than potentially ruining an engine.
I do notice no one has chimed in yet to say they've experienced a failure with a Wix filter, even though I am sure there are some.

Tigger

This response is a little off topic, but you Cummins owners should know about this. A few years ago Chrysler released a Service notice to all dealers about Fram filters. They are NOT on the approved filter list, (your owners manual i believe should tell you which ones are approved). FOLLOW the recommended filter list. Chrysler cannot publicly come out and say do not use Fram filters for fear of law suit by Fram. Thats why they have the (approved) list. If your Cummins engine grenades and you don't have the (approved) filter on. Your engine warranty is GONE! The (supposed) reason Fram is not on the (approved) list is glue or adhesive that seals the filter to the housing. The adhesive separates and clogs the oil passages and/or the cooling jets for the pistons. Seen the pictures at Chrysler training, the 5.9 liter had a hole through the side of the block!!!

I don't know if Fram has addressed this or not, but Chrysler has not sent out another service notice saying its OK to use the filter now.

Buy the way, if you think changing the filter after your motor goes up, don't bother, Chrysler can easily figure it out that you used a Fram filter.

Spike

Why risk it? It is common knowledge that Fram filters are cheaply made, cardboard internals, no anti drain valve, etc. Why in the world would you go cheap on an oil filter?? This just makes no sense to me at all. People will buy the best wax, the best stereo, the best whatever and then try to save a buck or two on an oil filter. The most important part of keeping harmful particles from circulating in the lubrication system. I for one would not even use a Fram filter on my mower(if it used one) never mind any of my vehicles.

440fan

This is a long conversation.   I would never take a chance on any of my cars and use a Fram filter. Just go to NAPA or wherever and buy a filter made by Wix or if you really like your ride buy a K&N oil filter...

ACUDANUT

K@N filters are fram filters that have been painted differently.  They are made by the same people.