I’m about to change my oil and I’m wondering do I need to change the drain plug gasket every oil change all my local auto stores are sold out of the part
I'd love to hear more on this and how the the testing was done and data collected. I have a lot of data showing otherwise on the factory blue filters.The stock filter is too small and I've had customers have the OEM filters drop pressure after a couple thousand miles, install a new OEM and the pressures comes back up.
I will counter nitpick that a few mm of oil level is likely negligible (with enthusiast frequency oil changes, not like we’re draining an acidic slurry that’s been in there 10k miles), along with all the oil clinging to surfaces that doesn’t come out.This is a really nitpicky thread and in that vein I'll say that since I spend $ and time on good oil and low OCIs, use new crush washers (not that I really think I need to) and let my warm oil drain completely, means that I don't add parts that will add millimeters to the level of oil that can be drained. Yeah, its a nit pick, but I own wrenches and I'm not afraid to use em.
Pressure differential. The OEM blue has a 29psi bypass pressure, which is unusually high. This is one of several reasons why I recommend the OEM blue. Most engines use a filter bypass in the 12-18psi range. Subaru is different here. The Suby blue filter also has a crap load of media in that small filter, which ultimately dictates flow and resistance to flow. My C63 which has an engine 2.5 times bigger, has less filter media and the filter is ~ 2 times as tall. There are few non-OEM EJ25 filters that meet this bypass spec. Most are in the more traditional 12-18psi range. How that plays out is not for me to speculate, but anyone performance minded is doing regular oil/filter changes long before the media has enough pressure drop to bypass. Few filters meet the same OEM bypass spec, but WIX is one of them. Most do not.How are you testing the bypass in the filter? It should be expected crack open, often actually (I know we had this conversation before and you didn't really answer this question in a manner of actually testing this, which is why I'm dreading even responding here).
Agreed, I said that because not everyone may have know that.Horsepower does not matter here... No need to reference it.
Pressure pre and post filter shows the pressure drop caused by the filter. If the pressure drop is high enough, the bypass opens. Can be cause by excessive viscosity (cold), or poor filter flow due to excessive contamination.I know how a filter works. Exactly HOW are you testing? I suspect your testing pre and post filter differential, no? If so, the post-pressure is the sum of the parallel paths (media and bypass).
This is were we got last time and I basically said the same thing.
So the Mazda filter is good then… I’ll just keep using that 😂Yes, I know that many OEM's use small filters. They also recommend never changing transmission fluid, really long OCI's, resource conserving oil, etc.
In any case, all things equal, a larger filter will filter better due to more filter area, better filtering through the slowing oil through the media, hold out longer in overall changer intervals... And far less likely to crack the bypass (crack, not fully open).