Cabin air filter
#2
Buy a high quality cabin air filter. There is much more material on it so it lasts much longer so is not much more expensive in the long run.
A clogged cabin air filter can cause the fan motor to heat up and kill the resistor pack (and maybe the motor also). Those are rather expensive parts and the Fit has a history of blowing them.
So with some cars, a cheap cabin air filter is fine but those are false economies with the Fit.
A clogged cabin air filter can cause the fan motor to heat up and kill the resistor pack (and maybe the motor also). Those are rather expensive parts and the Fit has a history of blowing them.
So with some cars, a cheap cabin air filter is fine but those are false economies with the Fit.
#3
I use this one. I change it once a year. Filter looks great every time I remove it, with typical debris and no clogs.
#5
Yes. It’s very easy to swap out.
#10
I think I agree with the philosophy of not going too cheap on the Cabin Air Filter.
And the way I look at it, if you buy one yourself...online or at a auto parts store, even if you pay a little more, for a higher quality filter, and you install it yourself (easy), it's going to be a whole lot cheaper than a dealership doing it.
So I would look to buy a better quality filter, then just replace it yourself. It's not going to cost you too much. It's filtering the air you breath in the cabin. I think it's worth it.
And the way I look at it, if you buy one yourself...online or at a auto parts store, even if you pay a little more, for a higher quality filter, and you install it yourself (easy), it's going to be a whole lot cheaper than a dealership doing it.
So I would look to buy a better quality filter, then just replace it yourself. It's not going to cost you too much. It's filtering the air you breath in the cabin. I think it's worth it.
#11
I own both a K&N re usable / washable cabin air filter, and also a ECOGARD XC36080
Every 12k I wash the k&N, and while its out drying I use the ecogard one as a one day stand in
The K&N was not cheap, but so far, I've already gotten 3 life cycles out of it, and once I wash/re use it a 4th time, it will pay for itself. by the time I hit 120k, thats 10 uses out of this thing .... and imo makes it worth every penny.
Every 12k I wash the k&N, and while its out drying I use the ecogard one as a one day stand in
The K&N was not cheap, but so far, I've already gotten 3 life cycles out of it, and once I wash/re use it a 4th time, it will pay for itself. by the time I hit 120k, thats 10 uses out of this thing .... and imo makes it worth every penny.
#12
I own both a K&N re usable / washable cabin air filter, and also a ECOGARD XC36080
Every 12k I wash the k&N, and while its out drying I use the ecogard one as a one day stand in
The K&N was not cheap, but so far, I've already gotten 3 life cycles out of it, and once I wash/re use it a 4th time, it will pay for itself. by the time I hit 120k, thats 10 uses out of this thing .... and imo makes it worth every penny.
Every 12k I wash the k&N, and while its out drying I use the ecogard one as a one day stand in
The K&N was not cheap, but so far, I've already gotten 3 life cycles out of it, and once I wash/re use it a 4th time, it will pay for itself. by the time I hit 120k, thats 10 uses out of this thing .... and imo makes it worth every penny.
OH its washable? hmm interesting ...i might actually try getting K&N next time
#14
I say just buy a NEW filter.- New is new.
I don't personally believe the concept that something that is being washed, the rewashed, washed again...doesn't deteriorate.
If it takes 4 cycles or more just to recover the cost of initial investment? That ain't worth it to me.
I feel better just treating the cabin air filter as a non-permanent, replaceable part. Feel better just installing a brand new, clean, NEVER washed and reused filter.
But to each their own.
I don't personally believe the concept that something that is being washed, the rewashed, washed again...doesn't deteriorate.
If it takes 4 cycles or more just to recover the cost of initial investment? That ain't worth it to me.
I feel better just treating the cabin air filter as a non-permanent, replaceable part. Feel better just installing a brand new, clean, NEVER washed and reused filter.
But to each their own.
#16
I say just buy a NEW filter.- New is new.
I don't personally believe the concept that something that is being washed, the rewashed, washed again...doesn't deteriorate.
If it takes 4 cycles or more just to recover the cost of initial investment? That ain't worth it to me.
I feel better just treating the cabin air filter as a non-permanent, replaceable part. Feel better just installing a brand new, clean, NEVER washed and reused filter.
But to each their own.
I don't personally believe the concept that something that is being washed, the rewashed, washed again...doesn't deteriorate.
If it takes 4 cycles or more just to recover the cost of initial investment? That ain't worth it to me.
I feel better just treating the cabin air filter as a non-permanent, replaceable part. Feel better just installing a brand new, clean, NEVER washed and reused filter.
But to each their own.
#17
Does this washable air filter have to get cleaned and re-oiled? Not sure if that's better for the environment than throwing a replaceable one out and using a new one.
FYI even the replaceable ones can be taken out, banged a bit to dump dust off them, then replaced, until they fully need replacing.
FYI even the replaceable ones can be taken out, banged a bit to dump dust off them, then replaced, until they fully need replacing.
#18
I bang mine out to clean until there's too much rat piss on them. Gross Then I'll change it out for another replaceable. BTW, I had a 'trap line' set up, plus electronic mouse repellent devices plugged into all four corners of the garage, so not 'wishing' the problem would go away, but it's on-going. I should make gloves out of each year's trappings
#19
Does this washable air filter have to get cleaned and re-oiled? Not sure if that's better for the environment than throwing a replaceable one out and using a new one.
FYI even the replaceable ones can be taken out, banged a bit to dump dust off them, then replaced, until they fully need replacing.
FYI even the replaceable ones can be taken out, banged a bit to dump dust off them, then replaced, until they fully need replacing.
you're not sure if rinsing it with a little water, (maybe some soap?) and a light coat of oil is better for then environment than whatever results from the manufacturing plant, shipping, packaging, retail store, driving to and from the store to buy it, and then throwing the old one (and the packaging from the new one) into a landfill, or incinerator?
#20
you're not sure if rinsing it with a little water, (maybe some soap?) and a light coat of oil is better for then environment than whatever results from the manufacturing plant, shipping, packaging, retail store, driving to and from the store to buy it, and then throwing the old one (and the packaging from the new one) into a landfill, or incinerator?