K&N Air Filters

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by Edgar MacArthur, Sep 10, 2007.

  1. I've been thinking about installing one of these in my 07 Santa Fe 3.3L.
    Are they worth the extra cost? I've read that there is a noticeable
    increase in performance, and maybe gas mileage. Any problem with the
    Hyundai warranty?
     
    Edgar MacArthur, Sep 10, 2007
    #1
  2. Edgar MacArthur

    Mike Marlow Guest

    This question comes up quite frequently in all auto newsgroups. DAGS and
    you will find a lot of both opinion and experience on the matter of K&N. I
    think you will find it sums in favor of staying with your vehicle's OEM type
    filter. K&N gets the good in its reputation from the openness of the filter
    media - and the bad in its reputation.
     
    Mike Marlow, Sep 10, 2007
    #2
  3. I've been thinking about installing one of these in my 07 Santa Fe 3.3L.
    Yeah, there's two camps on this debate. One says the performance
    increase is worth it. The increases airflow lets in more garbage so
    you're either maintaining the filter more frequently or you're getting
    more but dirtier air in your intake. Stick with the kind you've got,
    it's cheaper over the long term.

    - Thee Chicago Wolf
     
    Thee Chicago Wolf, Sep 10, 2007
    #3
  4. Edgar MacArthur

    hyundaitech Guest

    If this would be an oiled filter, there's also speculation that the oil can
    get on the air flow sensor and damage it. If you had an oiled filter on
    the car and needed an air flow sensor, you might see the manufacturer
    refuse warranty service. You may also have a potential problem with the
    engine warranty, depending on the type of engine failure. A valve sealing
    issue or cylinder abrasion issue may be able to be blamed on the filter.

    I'm in the keep it factory camp myself.
     
    hyundaitech, Sep 10, 2007
    #4
  5. Thanks for your expert advice. Now I know what to do - or, actually,
    what not to do.
     
    Edgar MacArthur, Sep 10, 2007
    #5
  6. Edgar MacArthur

    Bob Adkins Guest

    Ed,

    If you have a fire breathing 400hp engine and push it hard, you may
    notice a difference in power and gas mileage using a K&N. Anything you
    would notice with a mild family SUV driving normally is probably
    placebo effect.

    Conversely, the stock filter on your Santa Fe would probably handle a
    300hp engine with no measurable reduction in mileage or performance
    until it gets very dirty.

    The above is my humble opinion. I may be wrong, but I bet I'm very
    close.
    -

    Bob
     
    Bob Adkins, Sep 11, 2007
    #6
  7. Edgar MacArthur

    PMDR Guest

    K&N filters work in racing, but consider that race engines have to
    last a couple hundred miles at best, and then the air filter is thrown
    away and the entire engine is usually torn down and rebuilt. Any
    damage from the air filter not filtering is negated.

    Compare to a typical family car, where the filter stays put for a year
    or worse and is expected to last tens of thousands of miles.

    The same can be said of other parts used for racing: oil, wires,
    tires, etc. There are some things so specialized in what they do that
    they simply don't belong on everyday cars, no matter how much the
    advertising wants to tell you otherwise.
     
    PMDR, Sep 11, 2007
    #7
  8. Edgar MacArthur

    Matt Whiting Guest

    Yes, try racing slicks in a heavy rain... :)

    Matt
     
    Matt Whiting, Sep 11, 2007
    #8
  9. Edgar MacArthur

    Wayne Moses Guest

    Reply to message from Edgar MacArthur <> (Sun, 09 Sep
    2007 20:57:54) about "K&N Air Filters":

    EM> I've been thinking about installing one of these in my 07 Santa Fe 3.
    EM> 3L. Are they worth the extra cost?

    Depends on how long you keep the Santa Fe. If you keep it for the million
    miles of the filter warranty it should be cheaper than the cost of all the
    paper frlters you did not have to buy. AAMOF I think that the payoff would
    come even before 1 million.

    EM> I've read
    EM> that there is a noticeable increase in performance, and maybe gas
    EM> mileage. Any problem with the Hyundai warranty?

    There is a slight bit of a performance improvement and no change in gas
    mileage.

    I have had K&N filters in my 2002 Elantra GT, 2005 Tiburon GT (which now
    has a cold air intake), 1996 Dodge Grand Caravan 3.8l, and a K&N Typhoon
    SRI in my 2003 Mitsubishi Lancer and all have had the results in the
    previous paragraph.

    Regards
    Wayne Moses <> Mon, 10 Sep 2007 13:42:26 -0500

    === Posted with Qusnetsoft NewsReader 3.3
     
    Wayne Moses, Sep 11, 2007
    #9
  10. Edgar MacArthur

    Wayne Moses Guest

    Reply to message from "hyundaitech" <> (Mon, 10 Sep
    2007 11:36:15) about "Re: K&N Air Filters":

    h> If this would be an oiled filter, there's also speculation that the oil
    h> can get on the air flow sensor and damage it.

    I have followed the instructions for oiling my filters and found the
    instructions sensible in that they appropriately caution against overdoing
    it. If properly done there is no likelihood for oil to leave the filter
    material and blow into the air stream in a naturally aspirated engine.
    Personally, I have never seen evidence of oil or oily dust downstream from
    the filter.

    Just my experiences.

    Regards
    Wayne Moses <> Tue, 11 Sep 2007 08:00:13 -0500

    === Posted with Qusnetsoft NewsReader 3.3
     
    Wayne Moses, Sep 12, 2007
    #10
  11. Edgar MacArthur

    Bob Guest

    A lot of engineering has gone into the designing the stock filter that
    comes with the vehicle. It works great, a compromise between
    unrestricted airflow and filtering ability. I doubt a K&N filter will
    give any noticeable difference in performance and it just may be
    detrimental (MAF sensor etc..) If it's less restrictive, it filters less
    efficiently. You save gas, your engine wears out quicker.

    Save your money for some Amsoil (just kidding).

    And yes, Hyundai could very well deny warranty coverage.
     
    Bob, Sep 17, 2007
    #11
  12. Edgar MacArthur

    Bob Adkins Guest

    You got me! I was just about to jump in with both feet until I read
    the "just kidding" part. :D

    It never ceases to astonish me that very smart people fall for snake
    oil.

    -

    Bob
     
    Bob Adkins, Sep 20, 2007
    #12
  13. Edgar MacArthur

    Bill Guest

    I kinda wondered if that's what they made it out of ; >)
     
    Bill, Sep 23, 2007
    #13
  14. Save your money for some Amsoil (just kidding).


    I'm currently using Amsoil Transmission fluid and am much more satisfied
    with it than the OEM.
     
    Michael Shaffer, Sep 27, 2007
    #14
  15. What is different or what makes it "better" than the OEM? What do you
    notice being different while cruising down the highway?
     
    Edwin Pawlowski, Sep 27, 2007
    #15
  16. Edgar MacArthur

    Matt Whiting Guest

    You'll just have to read the web site as most folks that use it parrot
    the site. It'll be something like "quieter, smoother shifting, lower
    operating temperature and gets 10% better fuel mileage."

    Am I close? :)

    Matt
     
    Matt Whiting, Sep 27, 2007
    #16
  17. Edgar MacArthur

    Mike Marlow Guest

    Why? Are you going faster, further or something else? It's your money so
    you have every right to be satisfied with anything you want, but OEM fluids
    lack nothing that Amsoil provides, except cost.
     
    Mike Marlow, Sep 27, 2007
    #17
  18. Edgar MacArthur

    Mike Marlow Guest

    Well, if it says it on the web site, it must be true. After all, there's
    all those testimonials... Ya gotta take your hat off to Amsoil though -
    they've been suckering people in for a long time.
     
    Mike Marlow, Sep 27, 2007
    #18
  19. While I don't use Amsoil anything, I did switch my transmission over to
    synthetic oil (Redline MT-90). While there is a small difference in
    shifting smoothness overall, the most obvious difference is that it
    doesn't thicken up in cold temps the way natural oils do, so the winter
    shifting performance is dramatically better. With any luck, it will
    provide increased transmission/sychro life as well. I would expect
    similar benefits from Amsoil, since it's also a synthetic.

    BTW, the reason for choosing Redline MT-90 is that it's a GL-4 oil,
    which is what the Hyundai tranny requires.
     
    Brian Nystrom, Sep 28, 2007
    #19
  20. Edgar MacArthur

    Bob Adkins Guest

    Placebo effect? :D
    -

    Bob
     
    Bob Adkins, Sep 30, 2007
    #20
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