Air Filter

mcheary

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I have recently bought a boat fitted with a Perkins Prima M50 engine. I note it has no air filter, just an open end on the inlet manifold. Is this usual or do I need to fit one?
Any suggestion would be gratefully received.
Mike
 
I have a Perkins 4236 and it has a mushroom style air inlet with a gauze like baffle. However, the engines can be supplied with a few styles of air filter depending on the environment and maybe even not one at all: paper element, centrifugal / water coalescing, oil bath. It could be that the installer decided that the engine room air supply was sufficiently dust free and that an air filter was not required.
 
I guess it's been OK up to now, but there are advantages to having a filter - longevity of the engine and noise reduction. If you measure the diameter of the intake you can scour the scrap yards to find a car type to fit, but make sure you can still get elements for it. Another possibility is to find a K&N filter to fit the stub. They are coated with a sticky substance after fitting and can be washed out and recoated. If going this route, use the stub diameter and hp of the engine to select a suitable filter, but make sure there is enough space for it to fit!

Rob.
 
The intake filter on mine is just a sheet-metal box with some foam in it. Compared to machines on building sites etc, the air in a yacht's engine bay is pretty clean, so it doesn't need anything too sophisticated. You could probably build one yourself.

Pete
 
I have paper filters on my engines and am surprised how dirty they get, I don't think I would run without them. To quieten the intake noise down I think toy would need a filter in a reasonably sized air box.
 
I would have thought that fitting an air filter would effect the air/fuel mixture and hence running of through unit. I can't see that there is much dust in a marine environment but a coarse filter would be a wise precaution without affecting the running.
 
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