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In Jim Pasha's Tech Forum in the June edtition of Excellence (page 196), he says that he does not recommend K&N air filters for Porsches (968 included) with mass-airflow sensors because the oil gets sucked out of the filter and residue is deposited on the sensor which can be ruined. Or it can throw the sensor out of calibration causing a lean condition that the computer has a hard time trying to compensate for. I have been using a K&N for some time now with no known problems so far. I was wondering if anybody had heard about this or experienced this condition. And what is the best way to check my mass-airflow sensor for oily deposits?
mike
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93 911 C2 Coupe
95 Black 968 M030 Coupe (R.I.P.)
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[quote name='flash' post='35009' date='May 3 2007, 09:24 PM']jim is being overly cautious, taking into account the average user who fails to correctly oil the filter[/quote]
That's what I was thinking. My filter is very ligtly oiled and I would think that iit would take some mega-suction to get any oil off of it.
mike
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93 911 C2 Coupe
95 Black 968 M030 Coupe (R.I.P.)
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The MAF (Mass Air Flow) sensor is between the two large hose clamps right after the air cleaner cover, loosen those clamps- remove the MAF elec plug (about 1/2" by 2.5" on the bottom side)- remove the air cleaner cover and the MAF will pull right off.
PS.. you can wait till the MAF is free to remove the plug, it's long enough
Rick
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Do not spray the MAfs while the car is running. There is a wire that you can see if you remove the air cleaner housing, this is what you need to be clean. You can run a Q-tip with carb cleaner up and down this wire in order to clean it.
The wire heats up and a reading is made by the car from the air passing over it. If the wire is coated with oil it will take more current to make the reading and show a lean/rich mixture. A clean wire is a happy wire(did he just say that) and that is what we all want, isn't it?
The Oaks just ran and the Derby is tomorrow(read tooo much beer)
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You need to be very careful when cleaning the MAF sensor. The wires inside can be a little delicate. Most auto stores carry the cleaner. Remove the MAF from the car. Just spray the cleaner in the housing and let it sit so that residue can drain out.
I am up in the air about K&N. My Passat had a K&N drop in for at least 3 years. I have cleaned and reoiled about twice in those 3 years. I've stopped using it cause it seems that my MAF is starting to not work as well. I have been getting very bad gas mileage. Though it has not thrown any codes yet, my mechanic and I have narrowed it down to the MAF. Have already replaced the O2 sensors and that did not help. Now I'm sure a lot of you will guess that I did something wrong like over oiling it. I did not. I would spray it once very lightly and let it sit so that the oil will spread on its own. I may go back to using K&N filters someday but I don't think anytime soon till I can find out for sure what is causing the poor MPG. Just be careful.
[color="#0000FF"]Brian[/color]
[color="#4169E1"]My Collection:
94 968 Midnight Blue
95 Audi S6 Avant (Seattle)
93 VW Corrado SLC
91 Audi 200 TQ Avant[/color]