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#202968 - 06/05/10 01:27 AM Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose?
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
Once again, I heard part of something interesting on late-night radio.

One of the big problems of driving during or after volcanic ashfall is that the ash is sucked into the air intake of your car until the filter is packed, then the car overheats. Or it sucks it in and the filter doesn't catch all of it. Whichever or both, the ash is bad for your engine.

The radio guy was saying that someone around Mt. St. Helens (I think, since it was the anniversary of the Big Blast) came up with an idea to circumvent the problem of keeping a car running through ash fall.

It seems that this guy removed his car air filter (and maybe the dish thing that it sits in), and attached one end of that expandable aluminum hosing (used to duct hot, damp air to the outdoors from clothes dryers) to the air intake place (probably with one of those pipe clamps with a screw), then stretched the tubing out and put the other end into the car through a window. It was said that he was driving emergency people around.

I guess the idea was that the inside of the car is cleaner than the outside air.

I am assuming that he blocked the rest of the opening of the window with something like wood or sheet insulation and taped it into place.

Do you think this would really work? I know that most cars aren't air-tight, so the air being sucked out would be replaced, right?

Would there be much of an advantage to covering the end of the hose that is inside the car with some kind of filter material? If I were driving, I would be wearing a mask and goggles, because I know the inside of the car still wouldn't contain 'pure' air, just less chunky than what is outside.

Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated, as I live within 80 miles of a slumbering volcano, and the people downwind of Katla might also find it useful.

Also, this looks like a useful source of info in dealing with ash loads on roofs, in agriculture, etc: Volcanic Ash Mitigation

Sue

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#202970 - 06/05/10 01:56 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: Susan]
MDinana Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 03/08/07
Posts: 2208
Loc: Beer&Cheese country
Hey
When I was looking at snorkels for my truck, I came across some folks that ran the hose through their floorboard into their passenger seat foot-well. Same idea, but they were using it for driving through water. of course, a car isn't that waterproof...

But, I suppose the idea is the same. He just had a ghetto way of doing it.

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#202974 - 06/05/10 03:11 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: MDinana]
Art_in_FL Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 09/01/07
Posts: 2432
I would be tempted to add a bit of hose/pipe to the existing intake before the filter and to route this to a simple box with one end cut out and a rough filter cloth, pantyhose?, covering the opening.

The box could be rough cut from plywood and nailed together, caulked and/or sealed with foil tape. But a simple cardboard box might get it for a time. The box shouldn't be under any great stress in use. I would sit the box on blocks on my hood, and tape down the assembly with duct tape.

One of the benefits of driving a beater is that you can modify and tape stuff to it without ruining the look.

I would arrange the box so the filter end was down so falling ash doesn't rest on the filter. Given the large area of rough filter the air flow would be quite slow through the filter even at high throttle. So the ash would tend to fall off the filter face and get swept away by the slipstream instead of clogging the filter. If it did get clogged it would be easy enough to stop the truck, get out, and give the box a few whacks so the ash falls off.

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#202977 - 06/05/10 03:56 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: Art_in_FL]
Yuccahead Offline
Member

Registered: 07/24/08
Posts: 199
Loc: W. Texas
I am very suspicious of this late night theory. First, I believe that if a filter gets clogged, your engine won't overheat, it will just die.

As for sucking the air through the passenger compartment, I suppose it could work but all you will be doing is sucking air into the engine though the car's ventilation system and the air will still have a lot dust. Car engines use a tremendous amount of air and moving this through the passenger cabin won't be comfortable at best. Consider a 4 stroke engine with 3.0L of displacement running at 4000 RPM. That basically means some 6000 liters of air has to move through your passenger compartment every minute (4000/2 x 3L). That is 100 Liters of air or around 25 gallons every second.
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#202978 - 06/05/10 04:20 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: Yuccahead]
CANOEDOGS Offline
Pooh-Bah

Registered: 02/03/07
Posts: 1853
Loc: MINNESOTA
wet-dry vac filter and clever use of some sort of hose?.
i would have a look at a real military truck unit and see if i could copy some part of it with hardware store parts,but the first idea would work in a pinch for long enough to drive out of the dust.dust??--what sort of extra filters do the folks in places that have more than normal dust levels use?--if any..

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#202983 - 06/05/10 10:57 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: CANOEDOGS]
7point82 Offline
Addict

Registered: 11/24/05
Posts: 478
Loc: Orange Beach, AL
IMO Art is on the right path with this one. Leave the existing filter in place and rig some sort of rudimentary pre-filter; the larger the better.

Like Yuccca said, a lack of air is going to cause the car to start running richer and richer until (eventually) there isn't enough oxygen present to ignite the air/fuel mixture at all. If cars were overheating maybe ash was caking up in the radiator fins and not allowing sufficent cooling.
_________________________
"There is not a man of us who does not at times need a helping hand to be stretched out to him, and then shame upon him who will not stretch out the helping hand to his brother." -Theodore Roosevelt

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#202990 - 06/05/10 01:41 PM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: 7point82]
HerbG Offline
Member

Registered: 02/12/07
Posts: 142
A lot of heavy equipment that is used in extremely dusty environments uses a combination of oil bath and conventional dry filtration. Oil bath filters were very common until the 60's or so when dry filters were improved to the point that they were not needed under most conditions. I can remember when virtually all lawn mowers used a very simple oil bath filter and they worked well.

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#202992 - 06/05/10 04:50 PM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: HerbG]
dougwalkabout Offline
Crazy Canuck
Carpal Tunnel

Registered: 02/03/07
Posts: 3240
Loc: Alberta, Canada
Growing up on a farm, our tractors had a cyclonic pre-filter. This was a plexiglass bowl with a cone inside it. As the air was drawn in at an angle, it forced to swirl around the bowl, dropping a substantial amount of the dust out of it. Such a thing would be pretty easy to improvise.

Several of my older small engines have a two-stage filter. The paper filter is the final stage, but this is covered with a thin foam sleeve that is lightly oiled. It's amazing how much the foam pre-filter catches -- and how long the paper filters last as a result.


Edited by dougwalkabout (06/05/10 04:52 PM)

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#202993 - 06/05/10 05:35 PM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: dougwalkabout]
unimogbert Offline
Old Hand

Registered: 08/10/06
Posts: 882
Loc: Colorado
Cyclonic pre-filter is an excellent idea but probably wouldn't be off-the-shelf ready to install the same day.

The standard during Mt. St. Helens time was to add an extra foam filter around the car's standard paper filter. Amsoil makes them. Then you have to clean and re-oil the foam regularly.
Looks like the ShopVac arrangement.

Drawing air from the car's interior only means that you'll use the car's interior as your dust filter for the engine. Might be kind of hard to see out.

Modern vehicles will run on the correct mixture until there's not enough air to run because they use oxygen sensors in the exhaust to adjust mixture. Carburetors in the pre-computer age would run richer and richer as the air filter clogged.

The more filtration the better because volcanic ash is even worse than beach sand for the engine to breathe because the ash has very sharp edges while sand has been worn down.
You really, really don't want to drive in this stuff if you want your car to last more than a trip or two.

You also want to remove the ash immediately as it tends to set like cement when it gets wet.

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#203040 - 06/07/10 12:06 AM Re: Volcanic ash, auto air filters, & dryer hose? [Re: unimogbert]
Susan Offline
Geezer

Registered: 01/21/04
Posts: 5163
Loc: W. WA
Okay, some good ideas there.

Thirty years ago when Mt. Helens blew, cars were a little bit different than the ones these days: fewer computer parts, mostly still carburators rather than fuel injection, I think, etc.

A man I talked with was caught on the east side of the Cascades when the mountain gave its big blast, and he said when the ash started falling, he had to stop very frequently (every 2 minutes or every 2 miles, I forget which), take the cover off the air filter, remove the filter and beat it mostly free of ash. So, no matter what the eventual results were to the engine, the first and biggest problem was the air filter.

The falling ash was only half the problem; the ash that did fall was so light that any motion (walking or driving) would stir it up and mix it into the fresh falling ash, so the ash was coming from all directions. The air was so thick with it that while you could see headlights when they were relatively close, you still couldn't see the vehicle they were in. I've seen the photos of that, glowing orbs of light in very thick, heavy, dark fog.

Art, a couple of questions regarding what appears to be your very good idea...

Is there enough air actually moving through the engine compartment to clean the boxy pre-filter?

Would it be any better to have more than one side of the box open (covered with the filter material)? Even a wire frame instead of a box, covered with a filter? Would a fiber air conditioner filter work, wrapped around the box or frame? I wonder how many layers of pantyhose* could be used before it interfered with air volume?

Yuccahead's figures on air requirements for an engine would indicate that any filter material would have to allow enough air, fast enough, or the effects of a thick filter would have about the same results as a filter choked with ash.

Any more thoughts, keep 'em coming!

*Pantyhose, almost as many uses as duct tape!

Sue

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