What Are Cotton Air Filters, And Are They Worth It?

They can cost vastly more than a basic paper filter, but are the real world power gains from cotton-based air filters worth it?
What Are Cotton Air Filters, And Are They Worth It?

With air being one of two vital ingredients for effective internal combustion, it’s easy to visualise that a larger volume entering the engine equates to a more powerful combustion cycle. The next step in ensuring performance is increasing the cleanliness of the incoming air. Ambient air is often full of unwanted contaminants that only decrease the efficiency of ignition. To the rescue comes the air filter, which uses meshed material to impede the air entering the airbox, stopping any foreign bodies from entering the cylinders.

In most cars, cheap and disposable paper filters are used which are made up of compacted wood pulp bonded together to form a mesh of natural fibres. To produce an effective level of filtration, paper air filters are often bulky in size or are particularly dense in terms of fibre construction. Although this format is more than capable of initially filtering inlet air, flow restriction can become an issue. The more material that the air has to make its way through to reach the sanctuary of the inlet manifold, the volumetric flowrate will decrease, restricting power.

I wonder what volumetric flowrate this guy is achieving...
I wonder what volumetric flowrate this guy is achieving...

The dense mesh of a paper filter also causes dirt and grime to build up within the filter, further restricting the inlet air flow. The interaction of the air with the tight pulp mesh also produces turbulent air flow into the inlet manifold which is inefficient for flow rate into each cylinder. This all equates to the recommended procedure of replacing a paper filter at every service interval or 10,000 miles, allowing a fresh set of lungs for your engine after slowly clogging up over time.

To counteract all of these inherent issues, multiple aftermarket manufacturers produce cotton filters as a more convenient and performance-orientated alternative. Made to last the lifetime of your car (upwards of 150,000 miles), these filters use layers of cotton infused with oil that helps pluck any incoming muck from the air. Aluminium meshing is pleated with the cotton fibres intertwined between the metal to create a cotton-based gauze, maximising surface area leading to an increase in potential filtration.

The ability to be cleaned makes a cotton air filter a convenient and tempting modification
The ability to be cleaned makes a cotton air filter a convenient and…

The factor that makes cotton filters so great is the way in which they manage the accumulated dirt. Once the cotton fibres collect the dirt particles, the oil layering suspends the contaminant away from the fibres, leaving the filter material free for the next onrush of mucky air. The suspended dirt then acts as a primary filtration system, collecting other dirt as it travels by in a Velcro-like manner. This means that – to an extent – cotton filters perform better with age, completely inverse to the aging properties of a cheaper paper filter.

Tales have arisen of filter oil being sucked through the intake and insulating the mass air flow sensor. This in-turn would result in a miscalculation by the ECU, creating a lean air/fuel ratio. K&N - a prominent cotton filter manufacturer - has apparently dispelled this “urban myth” through “years of diagnostic testing”. The company went on to say in a statement released a few years ago that service outlets create this myth to repeatedly sell you ‘safe’ paper filters.

For every cotton filter used, you’d be going through up to 10 paper filters if changed at the recommended intervals.

A downside to oiled cotton filters is that the oil can eventually seep through to the air flow sensor, insulating it and causing a lean air/fuel mixture
A downside to oiled cotton filters is that the oil can eventually seep…

Although cotton filters shouldn’t need to be replaced, it’s good practice as a petrolhead to clean the filter at 50,000-mile increments. This can be achieved using one of many aftermarket cleaning sprays which can be applied to soak in and lift dirt from the filtration material.

This cleaning agent then must be rinsed out using low pressure water, followed by a thorough drying of the entire filter. The oil will have been washed away during this cleaning process, so before reassembling the air filter into the airbox, a dousing of filtration oil should be sprayed into the pleated material, freshening the filter for further use.

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While manufacturers like K&N will praise their cotton filters for their performance gains, the air flow and therefore power differential when compared with a clean paper filter is usually trivial. Although a sweeter induction noise can be produced by the different materials used within the cotton filter’s construction, the real benefits in the running of its corresponding engine are only really found later down the line of the filter’s lifetime when a paper filter would begin to clog up.

Mighty Car Mods physically debunked the popular cone filter format along with an oiled cotton filter sold by many aftermarket stockists (see above). It must then be understood that the majority of automakers have fully researched and engineered the stock airbox design (along with its corresponding filter) to achieve a high level of air filtration. So although that bulky paper filter may look like it should only belong in your Mum’s Honda Jazz, the real world differences in filtration to an expensive cotton filter are minimal.

Do you stick with a standard paper filter, or is an oiled cone filter more you kind of thing? Comment below with your preferred air filtration setups!

Comments

Anonymous

2009 C63 AMG, use stock filters, blow them out, change yearly. Live in Canada summer driven only. But I did remove the carbon filters this year and picked up .4 seconds in 1/8th mile drag times. 8.44 seconds, best ever. Stock everything.

01/04/2017 - 02:16 |
0 | 0
CastroHimself

I have a k&n panel filter in my civic for my b16a engine was running a short ram but didn’t care for it and the factory airbox has a cold air snorkel that Honda designed and I have a green filter for my focus ST. Just on the fact that I don’t have to keep replacing paper filters after a while they pay for themselves

01/04/2017 - 02:45 |
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Cameron McLaren

And they made noises

01/04/2017 - 12:41 |
0 | 0
Richie Jay Fernandez

Some sort of mazda because most of them are smiling

01/09/2017 - 15:33 |
0 | 0
PhillipM

Put it this way, all our race cars use normal OE paper filters…

01/09/2017 - 17:26 |
0 | 0

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