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acdii

I "REALLY" hate cold weather, What to expect in MPG.

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Its the cold air it ingests that also has some impact on fuel economy. Denser air requires denser fuel charge.

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I still dont trust a K&N to keep the intake clean, especially on a TC engine. When I had a 97 Exploder V8 I put one of those in, and 6 months later when doing a maintenance I found the intake coated with a fine dust after the filter. Needless to say that filter went in the trash. Any slight improvement from one is not worth the risk of a dusted turbo or worse a damaged engine. I have used AEM filters though and would recommend that over a K&N any day, had one in my 99 F350 Powerjoke and never had a dirty intake over 130K miles of use.

 

And now back to the topic, Today 13*, snow on the roads, stupid drivers, and me not caring if I get good MPG or not, still managed to get 40.7 MPG this morning to work.

 

What you can expect when driving more than 10 miles in this car, on hilly rural highways, and some suburban city traffic, right where I expected it to be last year when I bought the first 13 FFH, between 38 and 43 MPG this time of year. Of course YMMV, and I know there are still a few out there who are stuck with a brother of the Blue Devil, and I feel for you, been there done that, have the financial scars to prove it. Was it worth the loss trading it in for another, just for a few extra MPG? Some may not think so, but stopping the anger and frustration factor to me was well worth it. I know it will never get 47 MPG going from my house to the nearest town which is less than 10 miles, but I do know that under the right conditions it exceeds 47 MPG, been there and done that many times.

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A K&N doesnt really filter anything until it gets dirty, up until that point anything that can get past that filter gets sucked into the engine. take a magnifying glass and look through the new Ford and the new K&N with a light behind them, every where you can clearly see light, dirt will get through there, and the fine dust that gets through is the worst kind of dirt for an engine. This is why you NEVER should use one on a turbo charged engine, it will eat the turbine blades. If you dont believe this, jsut gogle dusted turbos, and you will find plenty of instances of this happening.

 

 

If you do use a K&N, dump a bag of dirt from a vacuum on it, shake it out then put it in. Then you will be protected. I am not blowing dirt out my butt on this, I saw it first hand in my 97 Explorer.

Edited by acdii

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