***Please read*** I just got off the phone with customer service over at Wix (1-704-869-3421), and I told the woman who answered the phone that I just bought this Wix 51040 oil filter that was made in China, she told me they are a global company and you can buy the same size filter again and it may be made in the USA, Poland, Mexico and she went on, etc. So I guess it's kind of a luck of the draw if you want to get a USA-made Wix oil filter. I suggest buying them in person if you want a USA-made Wix oil filter and checking where it was made. That's all I can say about what's going on with Wix. The woman who answered the phone also said she's in NC. and they have two plants there, and not going anywhere soon according to her. Thanks!
they do have a bypass valve. the way it works is the oil pressure pushes against the drain back valve and forces the filter media housing down against the spring, this creates a gap between the inlet and outlet side allowing oil to bypass.
@@michaelmcgregor3108 That's not what a dedicated bypass valve is. Click on the link, scroll down and read the product information on this filter. www.oreillyauto.com/detail/c/wix/filters/engine-oil-filter/80c2d8dbb188/wix-oil-filter/wix0/51040
Current country of origin list for MANN+Hummel filters: S. Korea, Brazil, China, Poland, Germany, Bosnia Herzegovina, Mexico, and the US. It depends of the filter apparently.
HHMMMMMMMM -- Disgraced Republican President Richard Nixon opens trade with China around 50 years ago. Disgraced Republican President Donald Trump condemns trade with China today. Which of these disgraced Republicans should we believe in !?? Why should we believe in ANY of them ?? As a really "senior" citizen, I truly hope that years from now, the Trump supporters of today will reflect on what damage was done to our once-great nation by the choices that they've made. Trump's isolationist trade policies were based on his notion that he could punish China with tarriffs, and the "stable genius" didn't have a clue about what tarriffs are, OR how they work. Donald Trump has destroyed the Republican Party -- the mid-term results PROVED it.
As a mechanic born in 1980 I've lived the complete breakdown of quality autoparts while also seeing so many Americans lose their manufacturing jobs. The worst part though is how there doesn't seem to be any money being saved by the consumer anymore. So how long do we keep letting the people in change of these decisions make absurd profits off of us?
Tariffs are the only way. The US can't compete with cheap labor and environmental carelessness. Otherwise, some middle manager is getting an award for "saving" money by buying cheaper (quality) products. Not helping that US companies are being bought out by overseas companies.
We are all responsible - this is what happens when publicly traded companies prioritize profits over everything else, which is a direct result of shareholders demanding this. And that's basically anyone who directly or indirectly has investments (401k, pension, even a savings account). Sure you could regulate things to put pressure on one side or the other, but that is not in keeping with pure capitalism. At the end of the day, it is a political choice, either by shareholders or democratic institutions, both of which are ultimately doing what we tell them to do....
Because protectionism is too 'liberal' and regulation of the industry is 'government meddling' . The free market will try to optimize for cheap. It is good at at that.
@@WhipCityWrencher You will not get an accurate read on wall thickness when a radius is being measured using calipers. Especially when you use the widest part of the blades. Try measuring out at the narrower tips, instead of sticking the can way up to the widest portion. Hope this makes sense.....
@@milojanis4901 Thanks, but I have tried that, the lip of the cans get distorted from the oil filter cutter when I open them up. The top of the caliper jaws have a cut-out and miss the lip of the can. The thickness might be off so slightly this way but you get a ballpark figure. I premeasure with the calipers before I videotape so it's pretty much right on. Might be off .02mm at the most.
The filter media in that new Wix filter was pretty disappointing. It's a shame what's happened with some of these well-known companies. Thanks for another great video. This one was very enlightening.
It doesn't really matter as long as it properly filters the oil. Honestly these tear open things and measuring all of this stuff means nothing. What matters is how well it filters particles out of the oil and maintains a good flow rate as it does so. If you want to know the quality of a filter put it in an engine and run it for 10000 miles then put the oil under a microscope and cut the filter open and see how it held up. Cutting open a new filter and deciding how well it will filter your oil without actually testing how well it filters oil is like deciding how well a pan will cook your food without ever putting it on a flame and cooking some food.
As soon as I saw the new Made in China Wix filters, I switched to Baldwin filters. Still made in the USA and very high quality. No more Wix filters for me.
Surprised how good they both look to be honest. The media on the newer one appears to be definitely thinner yes, but also accounts for better flow so its hard to say. I wouldn't honestly worry about using either of them if it were me.
I also was pleasantly surprised by the Chinese quality but this is probably due to the company itself more than manufacturer location, regardless, I would prefer to buy American
Exactly. You can filter effectively and still get better flow …. From the aspect of a racing standpoint which is where I’m coming from, I’d take the new filter. I a should say I use a Wix Racing 51515Ron my drag car. I’m not biased, just did a ton of research
For me it is rather simple. One finances an authoritarian regime that brutalizes its people as policy while the other supports a regime of freedom that does not run child labor camps or organ donation farming of prisoners. Freedom over Authoritarianism any day of the week.
China will build anything to your specification even spacecraft that land on the dark side of the moon or hypersonic missiles. The new media probably flows BETTER and since there is more of it probably a 'wash'. Have to ask yourself if you are running a trophy truck in the desert with the oil filler cap off the whole race behind another truck or are you cruising to work in your rental grade chevy impala V6 does your motor have feelings for the differential pressure on either side of that filter? Doubt it.
@@05EVORS agreed but, as a whole, we should be buying more local as possible. It's better for the resources we have as a global population. If possible.
That new filter is surprisingly good quality. As for the filter media, I'd call it a draw because the old filer has denser material, but the new one has more of it. The fact that the new filter uses a metal crimp rather than a glued crimp shows that Wix is still a quality product. I have one in my Ranger tranny now.
I agree, my line of thinking the larger surface can hold more particulates, and the larger holes allow the oil to flow more freely. It’d be very interesting to actually put these to the test with used oil from the same engine and see how each performs, it’s too easy to make guesses that are incorrect for one reason or another. Intuition often is not right in situations like this.
Wonderful video. As far as I can find out from WIX some filters are still made at the Gastonia plant. Under MANN+Hummel ownership many of the filters have had production moved to various locations within the M+H system including S. Korea, Brazil, China, Poland, Germany, Bosnia Herzegovina, and the US. It depends on the specific filter, I guess. Why? Bottom line financial reasons and production capabilities. Mann Hummel is a huge global operation. I have, in the last year alone, had Mann, Wix, and NAPA filters from all of those countries except Brazil. Even for the same application. Just the other day we had Mann filters from Poland, B/H, and Germany for 3 different BMW oil changes. They all seem to work fine if you stick to factory OCIs. We haven't had any oil filter related comebacks. It would seem that they all must go through the same QC process at all the facilities. I wouldn't loose too much sleep over it. Just use the correct oil and change it by the book. Or sooner. Regarding the Nitrile vs Silicone ADBVs: one would think that the Mann engineers have figured out that Silicone may not be needed for all applications and have modified the specs. Ford - Motorcraft did that years ago. Look at an FL-1A and an 820S for example.
I would choose the older wix oil filter ! just probably hard to find a 14 year old filter but just goes to show how company's cheapen there product to save a dime ! Awesome video !
They save more money by shipping your job to China than they do by cutting a few corners on quality. Ronald Reagan told us 40 years ago that if workers kept asking for higher wages, their jobs would be sent over-seas. Since that time, wages have remained relatively FLAT, while corporate executive salaries have grown obscenely excessive. Meanwhile, American workers have been deluged with the greatest propaganda effort in history, it's goal is to champion those who would RULE, and not GOVERN.
I often drove by the WIX plant in Gastonia right off I-85. Had friends of friends that worked there. LOTS of pride went into their work. The China filter may work fine.....but something about a filter made near your hose made it a good choice. Sad they moved to China.
@@Imaboss8ball YEP!! In the 197-'s workers DID take pride in making something. Because you can't or will not understand that does not mean it's WRONG!!!! Have a better day than you are!!! Thx
@@Imaboss8ball I would be PROUD to know that it was ME who kept the machines running smoothly. Pride resides within US -- it doesn't know or care about the task at hand. If my job was to kill Nazis, I would be PROUD to be the f**king "Employee of the Month" !!
Had a Chinese made oil filter split on my 550 Yamaha - something I only discovered when I had 5th gear break up & the split filter allowed metal particles to go right through the engine, wrecking bearings, cams, bore... Ever since, I've sourced Japanese, US, German or UK made filters whenever possible.
Here's a tip if you aren't certain what application your filter is for. The Wix filter look-up can cross reference any part number to their own, then you can see the engines/manufacturer list.
Good Day to all American Veterans everywhere -- and thank you for your service and your sacrifices for our enduring democracy. About those WIX 51040 filters: A quick Googling showed prices ranging from $ 4.69 to $ 15.56 (USD) . WTF !?? The comparison is interesting, but of no practical use -- since one of them is no longer being sold anywhere. The new WIX has the Spiral-Wound Core, with more even distribution of the holes -- and the oil flow. Nix on the Nitrile ADBV. The new White Glue looks a lot neater than the old stuff. Time will tell if it works better. New Gasket seems to be made of a different (shiny) material. The WIX oil filters have been the choice of professional mechanics for decades -- BUT -- a look at the media under the exclusive Whip City Microscope tells me that time has changed things, and not for the better. They went from Silicone to Nitrile on the ADBV. They kept the teeny-tiny filter element and the coil spring that's necessary when a short element is used. The combination of a hole-filled media in a too-short element and a Nitrile ADBV = NO BUENO !! Funny how there's no Consumer Info on the box -- seems like they don't want us to know what's in there. First made in U.S.A., then Mexico, and now China -- Methinks WIX is gonna lose some customers !! Many thanks to the Whip City Wrencher for keeping us informed of the happenings in FilterLand !! Hallowell, C 482-18-58 BT2 U.S.S. MAGOFFIN - APA -199 WESTPAC '55 - '57
Interesting and pleasantly surprised that Wix is maintaining quality. We owned a NAPA store in the 80’s and had versus filters on display. Some of the crap that some brands had sad.
I learned many years, that NAPA filters were Wix. And all you had to do was change the first or last number, of the Wix, to get the NAPA number. I forget which way it is. I usually buy from NAPA, due to the lower cost. Wix / NAPA, a Trusted filter!
Wix has changed in the last year or 2 for sure, I use em almost daily. 33977 and 33978 for John Deere engines , the flange for the locking collar is substandard now, I've had 4-5 of em leak ,and a couple of them you could pull right off when the locking collar is installed.
But you need to separate out product design changes from manufacturing location changes. There are plenty of design "advancements" that didn't work out...just look at GM of the '90s.
I have a ~20 year old AC Delco PF2 made in USA if you would like it. 262902 stamped on the shell, and 014067 on the plate. Looks like it would fit my '93 Ford Exploder that I sold early 2000's. Great videos!
Thanks for the comparison. Unfortunately there's few auto parts these days that aren't made in China. For me, where it's possible, I don't buy Chinese stuff so WIX is no longer on my list. There are still good quality oil filters made in America.
YEP. BOSCH Premium, Made in U.S.A., ISO-4548-12 @20-Micron rating; Silicone ADBV; Metal Core w/louvers, Nitrile Gasket; Cellulose/Synthetic Media; 200-lb. Burst Pressure; Black Cannister. EXCELLNT filter for 5,000-mile OCIs in your 4.6-liter Panther.
Many of the Wix filters are still made in the USA. I've seen different batches of the same part number (NAPA 7060) from the USA, China, Mexico, and even Venezuela. They're sourcing them all over the place. Sucks they're not all USA made anymore though for sure. I do wonder if part of it isn't just all this supply chain nonsense though, I mean, I'd rather have a filter that was made in China if the other option was no filter at all. If that's what they have to do in order to keep parts on the shelf, then well, that's what they have to do. 🤷♂
@@RW4X4X3006 All of the MotorCraft Oil Filters I've seen were "Made in U.S.A. " Their best feature is the Inlet-End By-Pass Valve. Great for 5,000-miles OCIs.
Interesting and timely, friend of mine brought up the Wix oil filters at recent coffee group. He asked me about the quality of Wix which I replied that I had only run a few of them but no problems in the past. I've seen more changes in the oil quality than the filters.
When working for a Truck-Repair I ordered so many filters. lots of mann+hummel. Oil filters, pressurised ait filters, with condenser, cabin air. some even made in germany, others from whole europe. depends on the type and production capacity.
@3:43 the older USA filter is lighter than the Chinese made one @3:53 ,the additional weight must be all the lead paint & lead (Pb)😁, I'll stick with the USA made ones .....that's my filter that was cut open 👍
A rare case where a product may have actually improved or at least stayed fairly consistent over time even with production switching to China. Wix is generally a good bet for filters. A few pros and cons for each. Honestly doubt either one does a much better job in any respect.
Superb video, I had the same conclusion with Honda filters, OE and aftermarket switched to smaller filters with less capacity. I found out via a crosscheck I can still order the bigger (taller filters) that still have the old size. Moneywise just a bit more expensive but filtering capacity +50% 👍
Mann + Hummel owns Purolator, the last batch of filters I bought all said made in Brazil. Can't really tell any difference. Maybe sometime compare older and newer Purolator? Unless it was done and I missed it.
Wix has factories all over the world you can buy the same filter three different times and get one made in USA, Poland, or Mexico. I had one made in Japan they do that to keep the supply chain stable. And silicone can be any color. Also if you’re changing your oil at the proper intervals it really doesn’t matter on the anti drain back valve if it’s nitrle or silicone. Your going to be chucking the filter in the garage in 3,000 to 6,000 miles anyway. Qa
Basically a Mann & Hummel filter ,they make filters everywhere....but less are being made in USA.....that's my old filter 😁, still got a few more ,I'll stick with the older ones
@@tylerexperience8704 That's O.K. -- China wouldn't buy anything from YOU, either !! Sounds like you fell for Trump's anti-China isolationist bulls**t. "We must trade -- or fade." John Fitzgerald Kennedy, 1960
I agree $12.99 for a filter in this quality range is terrible. Not too long ago you could buy a Royal Purple filter which has fully synthetic media for the same price.
Well this was done very well and he was very efficient. Nice job.This was visually helpful and I can use the Chinese filters without too much concern they are just paper mache. Thank you!
I thought they were now being made in Mexico. i found this information, Wix oil filters are manufactured in Mann+Hummel’s facilities located in the following countries: China Canada Poland Brazil Mexico Ukraine. there is also a factory in Gastonia, NC.
Dang I was actually almost surprised the china made one was gonna be better considering it had more pleats, etc. Until you did a zoom in on the filters and that's where I immediately said nope.
The extra pleats (are supposed to) provide more oil cleaning capability due to increased ability to hold dirt and contaminants over the shorter thicker pleats, The silicone anti drainback is specified for certain makes and models of cars and not all and if specified by the manufacture Wix filters do have Silicone anti drain back valves in some the white and the black can filters. I would expect though that they should put silicone ones in all their filters instead of just some of them.
Everything's a trade-off. With two valve materials they save you money, and it doesn't cause issues over the life of the filter. Change your filters and oil on the normal interval, and you are not going to run into any problems.
Last Wix filter I bought I could feel the outer metal casing 'flex/bend/move' as I was putting it on - didn't fill me with confidence in the quality of it, if they were skimping on the thickness of the steel. Using Fleetguard now.
I use the WIX 51040 for my 3800 L67, Last I purchased 4 from RA, and the label on the filter says "MADE IN USA", 052621DG date code. When did they start making them in CHINA? Now I did notice that the oil inlet holes in my filter are noticeably smaller than the ones in the video.
I used orange Fram Cor8 or PH8 for 375,000 miles on a 302 Ford with 5,000 miles oil changes, and it was still running fine last time I saw it. All it ever got was a water pump and injectors. Fact.
The new one may be just as good or even better in some applications. Thinner media will flow more oil. If dirt isn't caught the first time through but the oil flows easier, it will be there again to be picked up. And longer filter media means more area to deposit that dirt. A clue to this is that the new one also has larger inlet holes to allow faster oil flow. An ideal filter picks up the dirt and doesn't block the flow.
Exactly my thoughts. I’d like to see an actual functional test of the two of them side-by-side to know if that line of thinking is correct, but of course that’s quite a bit of effort to go to for a RUclips video 😉
Happy Thanksgiving WCW ! I have recently put in a WIX 51042 in my car. I will post here when it is time for my next oil change. Hey enjoying your videos my friend. Please keep them coming. Thanks again and be well.
Been using Wix for years, however I had one rot out from the outside in 3000 miles on my 2002 Cummins 5.9. That was 2 years ago and never another problem. Street driven only
You identified this as a non-bypassing filter, but the spring below the filter media is there for that exact reason. The filter media assembly will push down on the spring when there is a large differential in pressure and allow the filter to bypass.
That's not a dedicated bypass valve. And dont ever put one of these on an engine that it wasn't meant for. The engines that this filter is meant for have their own bypass valve. Your filter would have to be pretty plugged up for the spring to push down and do what you're saying. Link Below, Check out the specs on this filter. www.oreillyauto.com/detail/c/wix/wix-oil-filter/wix0/51040?q=wix+51040&pos=0
@@WhipCityWrencher, I agree that the engine has its own bypass valve, I'm just pointing out that the filter has the ability to bypass in an extreme situation. Your analysis is very good.
Ive used 2 of the redesigned 1516 filters and I'm extremely disappointed that they both had anti drain back valve issues. Dry starts after a minimum of 10 minutes of engine shutdown. I noticed after mann and Hummel bought out wix, something was changing when I received a case of napa proselect filters and they were Purolators.
Definitely go with older filter. What a shame Wix moved to China. I thought they were still US made filters. I’ll have to pay attention, as I won’t buy the China made filters.
@@Tim.1113 I look for good filters that aren't made in China. I'm perfectly willing to buy them from countries that don't wreck the environment and abuse laborers like China does. This is why I look for filters that are both good and not made in China.
TBDN aka Puro Denso makes oil filters under many labels . They are Toyota filters . The end caps are or were paper that often was not attached to the filter element making it a pass through can . I still buy Wix which makes Oreilly house brand a little cheaper . Project Farm does a much better evaluation of filters .
The drain back valve being nitrile on the new one has me curious as to what is going on with the silicone! I've recently noticed that the supertech MP version has also gone from the blue silicone to the nitrile as well! I'm wondering if it's due to a material shortage or a temporary cost savings from the economy!!
@@tylerexperience8704 Has anyone actually tested between types of anti-drain-back material, and does it make any difference, unless you go for years and tens of thousands of miles? I change my oil quarterly and I doubt the silicone type does anything but pad someone else's wallet.
@@jamesplotkin4674 well the rubber valves after a couple heat cycles gets rigid and hard, Fram had to switch over to silicone because of a law suit. A guy ran a extra guard and the valve hardened and fractured getting sucked through the motor, the media did not fail though, silicone is heat resistant and will not break its form. Also it seals better rubber seals terribly in filters, silicone like RTV silicone will seal excellent.
I used to own an auto parts store for many years and was pretty anal about oil filters for my own car. I used the AC Delco filter on my cars because it supposedly had the best media(synthetic). Wix was always the best overall quality filter for everything else and I use them today. Any filter that filters 20 microns or less is plenty of protection. The drain back valve is very very important to avoid dry starts and Wix was the best of all the filters of the units I saw cut open. With the bypass valve, which all cars have, some of the oil gets filtered all of the time unless the media is plugged up. The rest bypasses the filter all of the time so it is important the filters don't get plugged and dirty unfiltered oil is running through your engine. No filter system filters all the oil all of the time or we would have many engine failures as the filters got dirty and then plugged. Great video!
I worked in the auto repair field in the late 1970 to mid 1990's. I noticed the really old WIX were some of the heaviest and nicest filters. You could just tell it was so much nicer. I think they made some of NAPA's upper line filters at some point. That is what I used on my car. All the quality has gone downhill or is spotty on the everyday items. I loved the days of getting a halogen regular headlight but now they are crazy custom units for every different car. The old days are gone. Too bad.
Wix still does make the Napa oil filters. But Wix is now owned by Mann and Hummel. The older cars of the last century used to make a statement, they had there own personal style, and you could see one far away and know what kind of car it was, now they all look the same I can't even tell them apart up close without looking at the emblems. Yep, those days are gone.
I own my dad's 1950 Chevy pickup he bought new. It came from the factory with no oil filter. It still ran good at 100,000 miles, I completely rebuild it in 1973-74? Still running great , still NO OIL FILTERS .
That's why I had been buying Wix filters because they were the last of the Mohicans in quality and made in the USA I would buy a case of 12 on Ebay and use them but the last case I bought the new filters look different then the old ones I had been a Fram filter guy many years ago but they turned to crap over the years as well as Puralator. when my cars were new and under warranty I always used OE filters and they aren't all that expensive over auto parts chain stores
I just bought 6 of them here in Canada at Auto Value and they're made in USA, they have the silicone valve and they come in the same box as the filter made in China in this video, I don't understand what's going on here.
Both filters are good as long as the supplier company has produced on behalf of a brand manufacturer and it is not a plagiarism. Which one would I take? At the moment I would take the younger filter because every material ages and at some point the correct function of old spare parts is no longer 100% guaranteed as if it had been a new part.
A tractor dealer Pennsylvania did a video on OEM Vs aftermarket filters and I was surprised how much better the OEM one was when he cut it open. The best defense against dirt and metal is adding a centrifugal spinner filter that runs on oil pressure to add to a good filter.
I’d be curious if you took apart a Wix 51040 XP and looked through the microscope to see the difference in all three. Thank you for the effort you put into this and thank you for the donor of the old filter.
@@nathanielcasas8923 I know RockAuto's website says Denso oil filters have a silicone anti-drain back valve but here's a test I did on one. ruclips.net/video/yEij4zV3Apw/видео.html&ab_channel=WhipCityWrencher
Ford has filters that use nitrile rubber valves such as the filter FL812 that fits my 2022 civic so what I’m trying to say whip is that you can’t just burn one and than say they are all nitrile rubber you know ? That’s all I’m saying brotha
I’ve put a LOT of those 51040’s on I’ve noticed the 51334’s have a different seal that’s more like a o-ring. The filter actually stops dead when tightening it down. I wish they were still made in the USA but nothing any of us can do about it.
@@jeffclark5024 BOSCH Premium # 3410. Made in USA. ISO 4548-12 @ 20 Microns. Silicone ADBV. Cellulose/Synthetic Blend Media. Metal Core - with Louvers. Black Surface cools oil. Nitrile Gasket. 5,000-Mile OCIs. Easily Available. Moderate Cost.
Got an old VW I installed a full flow Ford filter (NAPA 1515 or equiv) and also have a few filters (I'm a pack rat) still in stock that are closer to 20yrs old.. I buy in bulk, it's cheaper in the long run.. and as little it gets driven, they've lasted a loooong time. This makes me want to cut one open for my own comparison! I just can't bring myself to spend money on Chinese products strictly because I support home made, so I doubt I will.
Nothing improves when American corporate CEOs send American jobs to China in order to INCREASE THEIR PROFITS while Americans struggle to feed their families. Stupid Americans blame China for the damage caused by AMERICAN CEOs, and the beat goes on --
I was thinking the new one was made better until you showed the media measurement and microscope. It’s weird where the corners get cut make it all better then cut corners on the actual function of the item.
I tried wix for a while but went back to OEM filters. The wix was much smaller even though it’s the recommend filter for my vehicle and the oil seemed to get dirty faster than the stock. No real difference in price either so I felt it was better for my engine to just go with what’s made for it.
The older one is better, but the newer one is not as bad as it could have been. Some of these companies have lost all QC and gone full walmart style. I will keep buying WIX, thanks for checking this out.
Unless you know how well each one filters dirt, especially small contaminants there is no way to tell which one is best. Thicker or thinner filtering paper does not mean the thicker paper is better. Also, the efficiency of the flow back valve is important.
My take is if you can see light coming through the New Wix filter media (like pin holes) then those holes are too big and that's not going to do a very good job filtering. What's going to stop the dirty oil (soot, carbon) from going through those holes? JMHO
Most oil filters use cellulose (paper), synthetic material or micro-glass. They all filter small particles of dirt. You see light through a filter and think it is poor quality but what happens when hot oil runs through it? How good are cheap paper oil filters? They have been used for decades and actually work well. Looks alone tells you nothing.
Sad thing is I work in an auto parts store and I see more American made parts come in for warranty return due to defects over any other country of manufacturer. Good video I like how well you covered the difference between them and that you actually used a microscope
@@ronkostars4258 When though? I mean, in the late 70's, 80's, 90's, American made cars and associated parts were terrible. A 1977 Honda Civic or Toyota Corolla was cheap as heck, and would run forever. A 1977 Nova (or Maverick, Aspen, Hornet) was lucky to make it to 100k miles, at which point it was worth $100-$200.
I used wix up until a couple of years ago I stopped not because they wasnt good but because they really wasn’t made any better then the oem filters for ny new stuff
The fact that the ADBV is rubber on the new one is interesting. a few other Mfg's have switched back! I wonder if the cost of silicone has gone up or there is a logistics problem in getting the material to make the ADBV? There has to be a good reason for company's like Mann and Hummel/ Wix, Fram/Champion have switched back to rubber. Personally i would use the old one over the new one!
@@WhipCityWrencher Yes, Whip, we 're gonna be dealing withh supply issues and increased costs for well into the future. Remember, COVID-19 and it's variants have KILLED OVER 1,000,000 AMERICANS, and half of them in the work force means a lot of talent and skills were ERASED from our collective production and distribution networks. With the mighty Mississippi River drying up, literally thousands of barges are stacked up, unable to deliver their cargo to be shipped around the world. Thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed by tornados, floods, landslides, and forest fires -- while our Western farmers and ranchers are plagued by drought. Tough road ahead, my friend -- a tough road, indeed. But hey, Whip -- you're gonna be all-riight, I can feel it in these old bones. 😁
@@WhipCityWrencher Thank YOU, Whip, for all your hard work -- and attention to details that make your oil filter Reviews/Inspections the best on U-Tube. Suggestion: When measuring Cannister Wall Thickness, the results be given in thousandths-of-an-inch ( .015), rather than fractions of a Millimeter, which is foreign to most of us. Crikey !! I just realized that I've been retired for 26 years -- and I'm running out of money. When I was born, my life expectancy was 59.5 years --- and I'm now 84 -- and still rockin' in the free world !! 😁
Jay the Florida pool pump motor repair guy. When Service Calls Longwood approved ! that was good info 2 know /see👨🔧good job !! Whip City Wrencher.. old !!
***Please read***
I just got off the phone with customer service over at Wix (1-704-869-3421), and I told the woman who answered the phone that I just bought this Wix 51040 oil filter that was made in China, she told me they are a global company and you can buy the same size filter again and it may be made in the USA, Poland, Mexico and she went on, etc. So I guess it's kind of a luck of the draw if you want to get a USA-made Wix oil filter. I suggest buying them in person if you want a USA-made Wix oil filter and checking where it was made. That's all I can say about what's going on with Wix. The woman who answered the phone also said she's in NC. and they have two plants there, and not going anywhere soon according to her. Thanks!
they do have a bypass valve. the way it works is the oil pressure pushes against the drain back valve and forces the filter media housing down against the spring, this creates a gap between the inlet and outlet side allowing oil to bypass.
@@michaelmcgregor3108 That's not what a dedicated bypass valve is. Click on the link, scroll down and read the product information on this filter. www.oreillyauto.com/detail/c/wix/filters/engine-oil-filter/80c2d8dbb188/wix-oil-filter/wix0/51040
Current country of origin list for MANN+Hummel filters: S. Korea, Brazil, China, Poland, Germany, Bosnia Herzegovina, Mexico, and the US. It depends of the filter apparently.
@@michaelmcgregor3108 That's the way it looks, Mike -- but that ain't the way it works.
HHMMMMMMMM --
Disgraced Republican President Richard Nixon opens trade with China around 50 years ago.
Disgraced Republican President Donald Trump condemns trade with China today.
Which of these disgraced Republicans should we believe in !??
Why should we believe in ANY of them ??
As a really "senior" citizen, I truly hope that years from now, the Trump supporters of today will reflect on what damage was done to our once-great nation by the choices that they've made.
Trump's isolationist trade policies were based on his notion that he could punish China with tarriffs, and the "stable genius" didn't have a clue about what tarriffs are, OR how they work.
Donald Trump has destroyed the Republican Party -- the mid-term results PROVED it.
As a mechanic born in 1980 I've lived the complete breakdown of quality autoparts while also seeing so many Americans lose their manufacturing jobs. The worst part though is how there doesn't seem to be any money being saved by the consumer anymore. So how long do we keep letting the people in change of these decisions make absurd profits off of us?
Until we are so uncomfortable in the upcoming future that we as north Americans will have no choice but to push back.Its coming.
Tariffs are the only way. The US can't compete with cheap labor and environmental carelessness. Otherwise, some middle manager is getting an award for "saving" money by buying cheaper (quality) products. Not helping that US companies are being bought out by overseas companies.
We are all responsible - this is what happens when publicly traded companies prioritize profits over everything else, which is a direct result of shareholders demanding this. And that's basically anyone who directly or indirectly has investments (401k, pension, even a savings account). Sure you could regulate things to put pressure on one side or the other, but that is not in keeping with pure capitalism. At the end of the day, it is a political choice, either by shareholders or democratic institutions, both of which are ultimately doing what we tell them to do....
Because protectionism is too 'liberal' and regulation of the industry is 'government meddling' . The free market will try to optimize for cheap. It is good at at that.
@@northeasterndirtandpropert7974 exactly… why else do they want to steal our guns
That's one of the best filter comparisons I've ever seen so detailed.
Thanks! 👍
@@WhipCityWrencher You will not get an accurate read on wall thickness when a radius is being measured using calipers. Especially when you use the widest part of the blades. Try measuring out at the narrower tips, instead of sticking the can way up to the widest portion. Hope this makes sense.....
@@milojanis4901 Thanks, but I have tried that, the lip of the cans get distorted from the oil filter cutter when I open them up. The top of the caliper jaws have a cut-out and miss the lip of the can. The thickness might be off so slightly this way but you get a ballpark figure. I premeasure with the calipers before I videotape so it's pretty much right on. Might be off .02mm at the most.
The filter media in that new Wix filter was pretty disappointing. It's a shame what's happened with some of these well-known companies. Thanks for another great video. This one was very enlightening.
Your Welcome!
CEO got a bonus. That's what happened
Disappointing? More pleats, more flow for filtration, same thickness, taller filter. All better imo
It doesn't really matter as long as it properly filters the oil. Honestly these tear open things and measuring all of this stuff means nothing. What matters is how well it filters particles out of the oil and maintains a good flow rate as it does so. If you want to know the quality of a filter put it in an engine and run it for 10000 miles then put the oil under a microscope and cut the filter open and see how it held up. Cutting open a new filter and deciding how well it will filter your oil without actually testing how well it filters oil is like deciding how well a pan will cook your food without ever putting it on a flame and cooking some food.
These brand new oil filter cut-opens only shed light on construction quality and defects, not media performance.
I'm with you,the older filter for the win.💪
As soon as I saw the new Made in China Wix filters, I switched to Baldwin filters. Still made in the USA and very high quality. No more Wix filters for me.
Fleetquard is also fine Purolator too
Surprised how good they both look to be honest. The media on the newer one appears to be definitely thinner yes, but also accounts for better flow so its hard to say. I wouldn't honestly worry about using either of them if it were me.
I also was pleasantly surprised by the Chinese quality but this is probably due to the company itself more than manufacturer location, regardless, I would prefer to buy American
Exactly. You can filter effectively and still get better flow …. From the aspect of a racing standpoint which is where I’m coming from, I’d take the new filter. I a should say I use a Wix Racing 51515Ron my drag car. I’m not biased, just did a ton of research
For me it is rather simple. One finances an authoritarian regime that brutalizes its people as policy while the other supports a regime of freedom that does not run child labor camps or organ donation farming of prisoners. Freedom over Authoritarianism any day of the week.
China will build anything to your specification even spacecraft that land on the dark side of the moon or hypersonic missiles. The new media probably flows BETTER and since there is more of it probably a 'wash'. Have to ask yourself if you are running a trophy truck in the desert with the oil filler cap off the whole race behind another truck or are you cruising to work in your rental grade chevy impala V6 does your motor have feelings for the differential pressure on either side of that filter? Doubt it.
@@05EVORS agreed but, as a whole, we should be buying more local as possible. It's better for the resources we have as a global population. If possible.
That new filter is surprisingly good quality. As for the filter media, I'd call it a draw because the old filer has denser material, but the new one has more of it. The fact that the new filter uses a metal crimp rather than a glued crimp shows that Wix is still a quality product. I have one in my Ranger tranny now.
more of a thinner filter media is not better
I agree, my line of thinking the larger surface can hold more particulates, and the larger holes allow the oil to flow more freely. It’d be very interesting to actually put these to the test with used oil from the same engine and see how each performs, it’s too easy to make guesses that are incorrect for one reason or another. Intuition often is not right in situations like this.
your watching this on a china made computer. Their stuff is great quality. Were lucky to have it.
Bear in mind, it is the Wix company that specs the filters. The Chinese are fully capable of making any quality filter requested.
I'm definitely surprised for rational comments like yours on YT. LoL
As Mahle demonstrates
Wonderful video. As far as I can find out from WIX some filters are still made at the Gastonia plant. Under MANN+Hummel ownership many of the filters have had production moved to various locations within the M+H system including S. Korea, Brazil, China, Poland, Germany, Bosnia Herzegovina, and the US. It depends on the specific filter, I guess. Why? Bottom line financial reasons and production capabilities. Mann Hummel is a huge global operation. I have, in the last year alone, had Mann, Wix, and NAPA filters from all of those countries except Brazil. Even for the same application. Just the other day we had Mann filters from Poland, B/H, and Germany for 3 different BMW oil changes. They all seem to work fine if you stick to factory OCIs. We haven't had any oil filter related comebacks. It would seem that they all must go through the same QC process at all the facilities. I wouldn't loose too much sleep over it. Just use the correct oil and change it by the book. Or sooner. Regarding the Nitrile vs Silicone ADBVs: one would think that the Mann engineers have figured out that Silicone may not be needed for all applications and have modified the specs. Ford - Motorcraft did that years ago. Look at an FL-1A and an 820S for example.
Hi Shooter,
Thanks For Sharing!👍
Hey My concern is oil flow rate through filter / filter material. I wouldn’t want to restrict oil flow to vital components .
@@josephpuchel6497 The new one has thinner media with more surface area, so it seems it should actually flow better than the old one.
@@josephpuchel6497 If you have good pressure, you should be fine, remember, filters were options for many years.
I have an S&W 669 in mint condition. :0)
Cool comparison, thanks Mark and Whip - nice to hear those Daewoos are still going - don't see too many on the road anymore
I would choose the older wix oil filter ! just probably hard to find a 14 year old filter but just goes to show how company's cheapen there product to save a dime ! Awesome video !
Thanks, Scotty!
They save more money by shipping your job to China than they do by cutting a few corners on quality.
Ronald Reagan told us 40 years ago that if workers kept asking for higher wages, their jobs would be sent over-seas.
Since that time, wages have remained relatively FLAT, while corporate executive salaries have grown obscenely excessive.
Meanwhile, American workers have been deluged with the greatest propaganda effort in history, it's goal is to champion those who would RULE, and not GOVERN.
The best filter review I have ever seen, nice job! Thank you!
Thanks, Rock👍
Glad you liked the video
I often drove by the WIX plant in Gastonia right off I-85. Had friends of friends that worked there. LOTS of pride went into their work. The China filter may work fine.....but something about a filter made near your hose made it a good choice. Sad they moved to China.
They do still make some oil filters there. Check out the comment I Pinned on top.
Lots of pride? Do you seriously believe that? Who has pride in working in a mostly automated factory?
@@Imaboss8ball YEP!! In the 197-'s workers DID take pride in making something. Because you can't or will not understand that does not mean it's WRONG!!!! Have a better day than you are!!! Thx
@@Imaboss8ball I would be PROUD to know that it was ME who kept the machines running smoothly.
Pride resides within US -- it doesn't know or care about the task at hand.
If my job was to kill Nazis, I would be PROUD to be the f**king "Employee of the Month" !!
Move to china then you can buy a local made filter.
*Thanks Mark*
Had a Chinese made oil filter split on my 550 Yamaha - something I only discovered when I had 5th gear break up & the split filter allowed metal particles to go right through the engine, wrecking bearings, cams, bore...
Ever since, I've sourced Japanese, US, German or UK made filters whenever possible.
French Purflux are great too
Here's a tip if you aren't certain what application your filter is for. The Wix filter look-up can cross reference any part number to their own, then you can see the engines/manufacturer list.
Good Day to all American Veterans everywhere -- and thank you for your service and your sacrifices for our enduring democracy.
About those WIX 51040 filters:
A quick Googling showed prices ranging from $ 4.69 to $ 15.56 (USD) . WTF !??
The comparison is interesting, but of no practical use -- since one of them is no longer being sold anywhere.
The new WIX has the Spiral-Wound Core, with more even distribution of the holes -- and the oil flow.
Nix on the Nitrile ADBV.
The new White Glue looks a lot neater than the old stuff. Time will tell if it works better.
New Gasket seems to be made of a different (shiny) material.
The WIX oil filters have been the choice of professional mechanics for decades -- BUT -- a look at the media under the exclusive Whip City Microscope tells me that time has changed things, and not for the better.
They went from Silicone to Nitrile on the ADBV.
They kept the teeny-tiny filter element and the coil spring that's necessary when a short element is used.
The combination of a hole-filled media in a too-short element and a Nitrile ADBV = NO BUENO !!
Funny how there's no Consumer Info on the box -- seems like they don't want us to know what's in there.
First made in U.S.A., then Mexico, and now China -- Methinks WIX is gonna lose some customers !!
Many thanks to the Whip City Wrencher for keeping us informed of the happenings in FilterLand !!
Hallowell, C
482-18-58
BT2
U.S.S. MAGOFFIN - APA -199
WESTPAC '55 - '57
Just think if it had a stamped metal leaf retainer spring- so much cooler.
Interesting and pleasantly surprised that Wix is maintaining quality. We owned a NAPA store in the 80’s and had versus filters on display. Some of the crap that some brands had sad.
I learned many years, that NAPA filters were Wix. And all you had to do was change the first or last number, of the Wix, to get the NAPA number. I forget which way it is. I usually buy from NAPA, due to the lower cost. Wix / NAPA, a Trusted filter!
Wix has changed in the last year or 2 for sure, I use em almost daily.
33977 and 33978 for John Deere engines , the flange for the locking collar is substandard now, I've had 4-5 of em leak ,and a couple of them you could pull right off when the locking collar is installed.
But you need to separate out product design changes from manufacturing location changes. There are plenty of design "advancements" that didn't work out...just look at GM of the '90s.
I have a ~20 year old AC Delco PF2 made in USA if you would like it. 262902 stamped on the shell, and 014067 on the plate. Looks like it would fit my '93 Ford Exploder that I sold early 2000's. Great videos!
Sure Thanks,
send me an email and I'll give you my address. My email is, Poker4me007@gmail.com
I like that, '93 Ford Exploder!
Ford Exploder!!!
@@wiz4020 ,the Ford Exploder with the exploding Firestone tires 💥 as well as engines
I think the old media is better which is the prime purpose of the filters !
Thanks for the comparison. Unfortunately there's few auto parts these days that aren't made in China. For me, where it's possible, I don't buy Chinese stuff so WIX is no longer on my list. There are still good quality oil filters made in America.
You're Welcome!
YEP. BOSCH Premium, Made in U.S.A., ISO-4548-12 @20-Micron rating; Silicone ADBV; Metal Core w/louvers, Nitrile Gasket; Cellulose/Synthetic Media; 200-lb. Burst Pressure; Black Cannister.
EXCELLNT filter for 5,000-mile OCIs in your 4.6-liter Panther.
Many of the Wix filters are still made in the USA. I've seen different batches of the same part number (NAPA 7060) from the USA, China, Mexico, and even Venezuela. They're sourcing them all over the place. Sucks they're not all USA made anymore though for sure. I do wonder if part of it isn't just all this supply chain nonsense though, I mean, I'd rather have a filter that was made in China if the other option was no filter at all. If that's what they have to do in order to keep parts on the shelf, then well, that's what they have to do. 🤷♂
Not only America, but Taiwan and Mexico, regarding Motorcraft.
@@RW4X4X3006 All of the MotorCraft Oil Filters I've seen were "Made in U.S.A. "
Their best feature is the Inlet-End By-Pass Valve. Great for 5,000-miles OCIs.
Thanks for checking them both out.
I would pick the old one, thicker filtering medium, more likely to trap dirt and particles.
Another great example for the "old good days"
Interesting and timely, friend of mine brought up the Wix oil filters at recent coffee group. He asked me about the quality of Wix which I replied that I had only run a few of them but no problems in the past. I've seen more changes in the oil quality than the filters.
thanks brotha, I love oil filters 😜
You're Welcome👍
Thank You!
The older stuff in most categories is most often better and cheaper.
Napa gold is my go to filter.. I am a retired mechanic so I know filters fairly well
► Oil Filter Friday, watch a New Automotive oil filter inspection video every Friday on this RUclips Channel.
When working for a Truck-Repair I ordered so many filters. lots of mann+hummel.
Oil filters, pressurised ait filters, with condenser, cabin air.
some even made in germany, others from whole europe.
depends on the type and production capacity.
@3:43 the older USA filter is lighter than the Chinese made one @3:53 ,the additional weight must be all the lead paint & lead (Pb)😁, I'll stick with the USA made ones .....that's my filter that was cut open 👍
Yep, the weight difference seems to be in the can, maybe some lead in the steel. lol
I also have some 20 years old wix and now I don’t have to waste them to see how sorry the new ones are
Thank You’ll
It seemed like the new one was winning until the microscope really showed what was up. Great video.
Thank You!
A rare case where a product may have actually improved or at least stayed fairly consistent over time even with production switching to China. Wix is generally a good bet for filters. A few pros and cons for each. Honestly doubt either one does a much better job in any respect.
Superb video, I had the same conclusion with Honda filters, OE and aftermarket switched to smaller filters with less capacity. I found out via a crosscheck I can still order the bigger (taller filters) that still have the old size. Moneywise just a bit more expensive but filtering capacity +50% 👍
Thank You!
I try to use a bigger filter also when possible.
Thanks for Sharing!
They are way closer than i was expecting.... thanks for the show
You're Welcome!👍
I stepped away from wix a while back as far as oil filters but the occasional air filter if the price is right
I recently bought two wix filters from rockauto for a small block Chevy and they were still made in the USA
Mann + Hummel owns Purolator, the last batch of filters I bought all said made in Brazil. Can't really tell any difference. Maybe sometime compare older and newer Purolator? Unless it was done and I missed it.
👍🏻😎 USA for the win! 🇺🇸
Thank you, this is very informative as well as disappointing. because now I need to find a new premium brand filter.
You're welcome!
Wix has factories all over the world you can buy the same filter three different times and get one made in USA, Poland, or Mexico. I had one made in Japan they do that to keep the supply chain stable. And silicone can be any color. Also if you’re changing your oil at the proper intervals it really doesn’t matter on the anti drain back valve if it’s nitrle or silicone. Your going to be chucking the filter in the garage in 3,000 to 6,000 miles anyway. Qa
Basically a Mann & Hummel filter ,they make filters everywhere....but less are being made in USA.....that's my old filter 😁, still got a few more ,I'll stick with the older ones
I like the USA and Mexico, and Japanese made wix filters, would not buy the china ones
@@tylerexperience8704 That's O.K. --
China wouldn't buy anything from YOU, either !!
Sounds like you fell for Trump's anti-China isolationist bulls**t.
"We must trade -- or fade."
John Fitzgerald Kennedy, 1960
I agree $12.99 for a filter in this quality range is terrible. Not too long ago you could buy a Royal Purple filter which has fully synthetic media for the same price.
Say "Thank you very much" to the stupid bastards who put muzzles on their faces!!!
@@Andrew__Smith What? WTH does your statement have to do with oil filters?
Wix Regulars are around 6-9 bucks for most. We buy about 30 per year.
@@GT-mn3bx Probably even cheaper on Rock Auto.
Well this was done very well and he was very efficient. Nice job.This was visually helpful and I can use the Chinese filters without too much concern they are just paper mache. Thank you!
Glad you liked it, Thank You👍💯
Old for the win. That new media is crap. It seems nowadays, filters are changing suppliers constantly. And no consistency.
I trust the new one in cold weather.
I thought they were now being made in Mexico. i found this information, Wix oil filters are manufactured in Mann+Hummel’s facilities located in the following countries:
China
Canada
Poland Brazil
Mexico
Ukraine.
there is also a factory in Gastonia, NC.
Hey cool....My internet web site provider makes oil filters ! Dig it.
Dang I was actually almost surprised the china made one was gonna be better considering it had more pleats, etc. Until you did a zoom in on the filters and that's where I immediately said nope.
The extra pleats (are supposed to) provide more oil cleaning capability due to increased ability to hold dirt and contaminants over the shorter thicker pleats, The silicone anti drainback is specified for certain makes and models of cars and not all and if specified by the manufacture Wix filters do have Silicone anti drain back valves in some the white and the black can filters. I would expect though that they should put silicone ones in all their filters instead of just some of them.
Everything's a trade-off. With two valve materials they save you money, and it doesn't cause issues over the life of the filter.
Change your filters and oil on the normal interval, and you are not going to run into any problems.
Older filter media definitely better. 👍👍👍👍👍
Need improvement in that area FOR SURE. Quality isn't what it USED to be.
I only buy Callahan oil filters... best sales team in the business.
Last Wix filter I bought I could feel the outer metal casing 'flex/bend/move' as I was putting it on - didn't fill me with confidence in the quality of it, if they were skimping on the thickness of the steel. Using Fleetguard now.
The WIX XP filters I bought recently were made in the USA and have the silicone valve and the quality seems excellent.
Thanks for Sharing👍
I use the WIX 51040 for my 3800 L67, Last I purchased 4 from RA, and the label on the filter says "MADE IN USA", 052621DG date code. When did they start making them in CHINA? Now I did notice that the oil inlet holes in my filter are noticeably smaller than the ones in the video.
I don't know? The Wix oil filters seem to be made all over, I've opened some that were made in Mexico also.
I used orange Fram Cor8 or PH8 for 375,000 miles on a 302 Ford with 5,000 miles oil changes, and it was still running fine last time I saw it. All it ever got was a water pump and injectors. Fact.
The new one may be just as good or even better in some applications. Thinner media will flow more oil. If dirt isn't caught the first time through but the oil flows easier, it will be there again to be picked up. And longer filter media means more area to deposit that dirt. A clue to this is that the new one also has larger inlet holes to allow faster oil flow. An ideal filter picks up the dirt and doesn't block the flow.
Exactly my thoughts. I’d like to see an actual functional test of the two of them side-by-side to know if that line of thinking is correct, but of course that’s quite a bit of effort to go to for a RUclips video 😉
Happy Thanksgiving WCW ! I have recently put in a WIX 51042 in my car. I will post here when it is time for my next oil change. Hey enjoying your videos my friend. Please keep them coming. Thanks again and be well.
Thank You!
Happing Thanksgiving to You as Well!🦃
Ones I get from Rockauto always say made in Poland. Guess it depends on the individual filter model.
Been using Wix for years, however I had one rot out from the outside in 3000 miles on my 2002 Cummins 5.9.
That was 2 years ago and never another problem.
Street driven only
Thanks for Sharing!
You identified this as a non-bypassing filter, but the spring below the filter media is there for that exact reason. The filter media assembly will push down on the spring when there is a large differential in pressure and allow the filter to bypass.
That's not a dedicated bypass valve. And dont ever put one of these on an engine that it wasn't meant for. The engines that this filter is meant for have their own bypass valve. Your filter would have to be pretty plugged up for the spring to push down and do what you're saying. Link Below, Check out the specs on this filter. www.oreillyauto.com/detail/c/wix/wix-oil-filter/wix0/51040?q=wix+51040&pos=0
@@WhipCityWrencher, I agree that the engine has its own bypass valve, I'm just pointing out that the filter has the ability to bypass in an extreme situation.
Your analysis is very good.
@@B81Mack Thank You!👍
I have a WIX on my 99 Toyota...Made in Mexico. A great video as usual..thanks:-)
Thanks Don!
You're Welcome!
Ive used 2 of the redesigned 1516 filters and I'm extremely disappointed that they both had anti drain back valve issues. Dry starts after a minimum of 10 minutes of engine shutdown. I noticed after mann and Hummel bought out wix, something was changing when I received a case of napa proselect filters and they were Purolators.
Great review, you covered all the stuff I would have had questions about. Disappointing though, I am now a "former" Wix consumer. 😗
Read my pinned comment on top. Thanks!
The XP filter line is my choice when I buy Wix. Not as many applications as the standard Wix filter, though
I just purchased A WIX XP and Purolator One. Both were made by Mann + Hummel in South Korea and have the same base plate.
Definitely go with older filter. What a shame Wix moved to China. I thought they were still US made filters. I’ll have to pay attention, as I won’t buy the China made filters.
Some are made in Mexico. There maybe some sizes that are still made here.
Last 5 years they were made in mexico buy puralator boss there american made
It sucks that they decided to make those in China. I try hard to avoid things that are made in China, so I will be avoiding Wix.
Same "O"....
Fram is made in America.
Awful filter so not everything is better when made in USA.
I understand your point but I’m not going to worry about it.
@@Tim.1113 Fram is cheap made trash filters-I would use WIX China over Fram USA made always....Wonder if Fram has always made trash oil filters?....
@@Tim.1113 I look for good filters that aren't made in China. I'm perfectly willing to buy them from countries that don't wreck the environment and abuse laborers like China does.
This is why I look for filters that are both good and not made in China.
Ill buy things from anywhere so long as its not china, most other countries Im fine buying stuff from though
I just always "assumed" Wix was USA made,just looked at my Wix and Napa and both made in Mexico. Thank you
Hi William,
You're Welcome!
TBDN aka Puro Denso makes oil filters under many labels . They are Toyota filters . The end caps are or were paper that often was not attached to the filter element making it a pass through can . I still buy Wix which makes Oreilly house brand a little cheaper . Project Farm does a much better evaluation of filters .
I would choose whatever I could get my hands on, and it will be just fine.
Great Video, Thank You! Interesting if you could pass the same flow through each filter and see if there is any difference in pressure.
The old one wins! Nice job comparing the two!
Thank You!👍
The drain back valve being nitrile on the new one has me curious as to what is going on with the silicone! I've recently noticed that the supertech MP version has also gone from the blue silicone to the nitrile as well! I'm wondering if it's due to a material shortage or a temporary cost savings from the economy!!
Most likely, silicone material supply chain issues.
I think it's a supply issue also, some seem to have others not.
Yeah I’ve been buying up silicone Fram extra guards and ultras at Walmart, I’m hating the supply problems
@@tylerexperience8704 Has anyone actually tested between types of anti-drain-back material, and does it make any difference, unless you go for years and tens of thousands of miles? I change my oil quarterly and I doubt the silicone type does anything but pad someone else's wallet.
@@jamesplotkin4674 well the rubber valves after a couple heat cycles gets rigid and hard, Fram had to switch over to silicone because of a law suit. A guy ran a extra guard and the valve hardened and fractured getting sucked through the motor, the media did not fail though, silicone is heat resistant and will not break its form. Also it seals better rubber seals terribly in filters, silicone like RTV silicone will seal excellent.
I used to own an auto parts store for many years and was pretty anal about oil filters for my own car. I used the AC Delco filter on my cars because it supposedly had the best media(synthetic). Wix was always the best overall quality filter for everything else and I use them today. Any filter that filters 20 microns or less is plenty of protection. The drain back valve is very very important to avoid dry starts and Wix was the best of all the filters of the units I saw cut open. With the bypass valve, which all cars have, some of the oil gets filtered all of the time unless the media is plugged up. The rest bypasses the filter all of the time so it is important the filters don't get plugged and dirty unfiltered oil is running through your engine. No filter system filters all the oil all of the time or we would have many engine failures as the filters got dirty and then plugged. Great video!
Thanks!
With regular oil changes, the filter shouldn't get clogged unless the engine is very worn, piston rings, etc.
@@WhipCityWrencher I agree and only use quality synthetic oils that are harder to break down.
@@thegman6489 👍
I worked in the auto repair field in the late 1970 to mid 1990's. I noticed the really old WIX were some of the heaviest and nicest filters. You could just tell it was so much nicer. I think they made some of NAPA's upper line filters at some point. That is what I used on my car. All the quality has gone downhill or is spotty on the everyday items. I loved the days of getting a halogen regular headlight but now they are crazy custom units for every different car. The old days are gone. Too bad.
Wix still does make the Napa oil filters. But Wix is now owned by Mann and Hummel.
The older cars of the last century used to make a statement, they had there own personal style, and you could see one far away and know what kind of car it was, now they all look the same I can't even tell them apart up close without looking at the emblems. Yep, those days are gone.
I own my dad's 1950 Chevy pickup he bought new. It came from the factory with no oil filter. It still ran good at 100,000 miles, I completely rebuild it in 1973-74? Still running great , still NO OIL FILTERS .
Thanks for sharing!
That's why I had been buying Wix filters because they were the last of the Mohicans in quality and made in the USA I would buy a case of 12 on Ebay and use them but the last case I bought the new filters look different then the old ones I had been a Fram filter guy many years ago but they turned to crap over the years as well as Puralator. when my cars were new and under warranty I always used OE filters and they aren't all that expensive over auto parts chain stores
I just bought 6 of them here in Canada at Auto Value and they're made in USA, they have the silicone valve and they come in the same box as the filter made in China in this video, I don't understand what's going on here.
Both filters are good as long as the supplier company has produced on behalf of a brand manufacturer and it is not a plagiarism. Which one would I take? At the moment I would take the younger filter because every material ages and at some point the correct function of old spare parts is no longer 100% guaranteed as if it had been a new part.
Hi Dennis,
Thanks for Sharing!
A tractor dealer Pennsylvania did a video on OEM Vs aftermarket filters and I was surprised how much better the OEM one was when he cut it open.
The best defense against dirt and metal is adding a centrifugal spinner filter that runs on oil pressure to add to a good filter.
He compared OEM to three levels of Napa filters all made by wiz.
m.ruclips.net/video/OMrI791m-pU/видео.html
NAPA once had a filter display of cut open filters, but took it down when China started making wix filters
I'm just impressed that Mark holds on to his two Daewoos.. You know how rare it is?
I’d be curious if you took apart a Wix 51040 XP and looked through the microscope to see the difference in all three. Thank you for the effort you put into this and thank you for the donor of the old filter.
Been using the Mobil 1 oil filters for a while now. At least they are still made in the USA.
Did you do a burn test on the anti drain back valve to make sure it was nitrile rubber ? Because sometimes silicone is black
No, I didn't this time, but all the black ones I ever tested were nitrile rubber. Where have you seen a black silicone anti-drain back valve? Thanks!
Denso sometimes uses black silicone anti drainback valves on there filters
@@nathanielcasas8923 I know RockAuto's website says Denso oil filters have a silicone anti-drain back valve but here's a test I did on one.
ruclips.net/video/yEij4zV3Apw/видео.html&ab_channel=WhipCityWrencher
Yeah but you also gotta remember it depends on the application no two filters are the same
Ford has filters that use nitrile rubber valves such as the filter FL812 that fits my 2022 civic so what I’m trying to say whip is that you can’t just burn one and than say they are all nitrile rubber you know ? That’s all I’m saying brotha
Didn't know that. I quit using them a long time ago when they got sold to Mann+Hummel
I’ve put a LOT of those 51040’s on I’ve noticed the 51334’s have a different seal that’s more like a o-ring. The filter actually stops dead when tightening it down. I wish they were still made in the USA but nothing any of us can do about it.
I buy filters from brands that are produced domestically, that's what I do about it.
@@GrandPrix46 what do you recommend? What brand or brands?
@@jeffclark5024 BOSCH Premium # 3410.
Made in USA.
ISO 4548-12 @ 20 Microns.
Silicone ADBV.
Cellulose/Synthetic Blend Media.
Metal Core - with Louvers.
Black Surface cools oil.
Nitrile Gasket.
5,000-Mile OCIs.
Easily Available.
Moderate Cost.
Got an old VW I installed a full flow Ford filter (NAPA 1515 or equiv) and also have a few filters (I'm a pack rat) still in stock that are closer to 20yrs old.. I buy in bulk, it's cheaper in the long run.. and as little it gets driven, they've lasted a loooong time. This makes me want to cut one open for my own comparison!
I just can't bring myself to spend money on Chinese products strictly because I support home made, so I doubt I will.
Nothing improves when General Chin has his slaves make it.
Nothing improves when American corporate CEOs send American jobs to China in order to INCREASE THEIR PROFITS while Americans struggle to feed their families.
Stupid Americans blame China for the damage caused by AMERICAN CEOs, and the beat goes on --
Probably use the new filters to filter the used cooking oil & duck fat in the deep fryer & wok oil 😁
I was thinking the new one was made better until you showed the media measurement and microscope. It’s weird where the corners get cut make it all better then cut corners on the actual function of the item.
I tried wix for a while but went back to OEM filters. The wix was much smaller even though it’s the recommend filter for my vehicle and the oil seemed to get dirty faster than the stock. No real difference in price either so I felt it was better for my engine to just go with what’s made for it.
Thanks for Sharing!
I've been using wicks 10-15 years never had any problem. The Fram filters are the biggest joke
The older one is better, but the newer one is not as bad as it could have been. Some of these companies have lost all QC and gone full walmart style. I will keep buying WIX, thanks for checking this out.
Unless you know how well each one filters dirt, especially small contaminants there is no way to tell which one is best. Thicker or thinner filtering paper does not mean the thicker paper is better. Also, the efficiency of the flow back valve is important.
My take is if you can see light coming through the New Wix filter media (like pin holes) then those holes are too big and that's not going to do a very good job filtering. What's going to stop the dirty oil (soot, carbon) from going through those holes? JMHO
Most oil filters use cellulose (paper), synthetic material or micro-glass. They all filter small particles of dirt. You see light through a filter and think it is poor quality but what happens when hot oil runs through it? How good are cheap paper oil filters? They have been used for decades and actually work well. Looks alone tells you nothing.
@@williamwaters4506 Holes in filter material tell me all I need to know.
@@williamwaters4506
Holes tell me a LOT !
A filter is only as good as the BIGGEST hole in the media.
Maybe oil filters are a scam, we won't know until someone does an oil filter delete and we see how long the engine lasts without one.
This video was very well made.
Thank You Vinny!
Sad thing is I work in an auto parts store and I see more American made parts come in for warranty return due to defects over any other country of manufacturer. Good video I like how well you covered the difference between them and that you actually used a microscope
Thanks Josh!
Yes, "American Made" doesn't always mean "Better Made" unfortunately.
@@ronkostars4258 the real sad thing is that it used to be that way at one point in time america did make the best products
@@Skaadi89- That's true.
@@ronkostars4258 When though? I mean, in the late 70's, 80's, 90's, American made cars and associated parts were terrible. A 1977 Honda Civic or Toyota Corolla was cheap as heck, and would run forever. A 1977 Nova (or Maverick, Aspen, Hornet) was lucky to make it to 100k miles, at which point it was worth $100-$200.
I used wix up until a couple of years ago I stopped not because they wasnt good but because they really wasn’t made any better then the oem filters for ny new stuff
The fact that the ADBV is rubber on the new one is interesting. a few other Mfg's have switched back! I wonder if the cost of silicone has gone up or there is a logistics problem in getting the material to make the ADBV? There has to be a good reason for company's like Mann and Hummel/ Wix, Fram/Champion have switched back to rubber. Personally i would use the old one over the new one!
I think it's a supply issue, I've noticed the newer Frams have silicone anti-drain back valves again.
@@WhipCityWrencher Yes, Whip, we 're gonna be dealing withh supply issues and increased costs for well into the future. Remember, COVID-19 and it's variants have KILLED OVER 1,000,000 AMERICANS, and half of them in the work force means a lot of talent and skills were ERASED from our collective production and distribution networks.
With the mighty Mississippi River drying up, literally thousands of barges are stacked up, unable to deliver their cargo to be shipped around the world.
Thousands of homes and businesses were destroyed by tornados, floods, landslides, and forest fires -- while our Western farmers and ranchers are plagued by drought.
Tough road ahead, my friend -- a tough road, indeed.
But hey, Whip -- you're gonna be all-riight, I can feel it in these old bones. 😁
@@SlikLizrd Thanks, Chuck!👍
@@WhipCityWrencher Thank YOU, Whip, for all your hard work -- and attention to details that make your oil filter Reviews/Inspections the best on U-Tube.
Suggestion: When measuring Cannister Wall Thickness, the results be given in thousandths-of-an-inch ( .015), rather than fractions of a Millimeter, which is foreign to most of us.
Crikey !! I just realized that I've been retired for 26 years -- and I'm running out of money.
When I was born, my life expectancy was 59.5 years --- and I'm now 84 -- and still rockin' in the free world !! 😁
I use to buy wix all the time. Not anymore . What's made in America?
I was surprised at how good the Chinese filter actually was, I would like to see a comparison with a German vs Chinese made filter.
Jay the Florida pool pump motor repair guy. When Service Calls Longwood approved ! that was good info 2 know /see👨🔧good job !! Whip City Wrencher.. old !!
Thanks!👍
@@WhipCityWrencher I will send you some filters . when I get a chance
@@poolmotorrepairguyFL Thanks! When you want to send them, Email me and I'll give you my address. My Email is, Poker4me007@gmail.com