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.Well this one is the Haldex PURest dryer on my 2008 A1R. Service takes about 10 minutes. You drain the air tanks, remove the 4 cover bolts, and pull the filter housing off. The filter turns 45 degrees and pops out of the housing. You clean everything, lube up the new o-ring and the one in the center of the filter and bolt it back to the dryer. It's extremely easy.
I get the filters from my commercial account with NAPA. They are about $5 cheaper than the best price I can find online that isn't a chinese knock off. The filter comes with detailed instructions also.
so the link in the sticky is working again? (not in position to check the sticky link)I have a 2003 M1079A1 and I upgraded the drier a couple years ago. Thanks for the info. Also I’ve been on this forum for7 years a didn’t know about that parts spread sheet. Very nice to have, we myself included need to add to the part # as it’s missing a lot.
Works fine for me anyway.so the link in the sticky is working again? (not in position to check the sticky link)
Surprised that I've never found a Chinese knockoff of these filters. At $200 a pop there certainly should be.The filter is a desiccant cartridge and is sealed/consumable. The cartridge (this is only for the PURest dryer used on later A1's) is a Haldex DQ6050.
All the parts are listed in the FMTV parts spreadsheet stickied at the top of this subforum.
The original cartridge was still on my truck from 2008 when I got it (did not know this). Mind you it only had 2750 miles on it. It destroyed my compressor around 5800 miles on the odometer driving from Texas to Portland. The backpressure from the cartridge caused the compressor to overheat and the reed valves broke into multiple pieces - several of which dropped into one of the cylinders and punched a hole through a piston. The compressor was unable to make air, and when it was running it was also pumping air into the engine crankcase through the hole in the piston causing a large amount of oil to be expelled via the crankcase breather tube. Made quite the mess. Almost stranded me 100 miles from my shop but it did make it home before it completely blew up a few days later.Surprised that I've never found a Chinese knockoff of these filters. At $200 a pop there certainly should be.
I live in a highly humid environment, but I've only replaced mine once in three years. I even considered swapping to the old style so I could clean/re-use.
Yeah, I'm cheap. Actually, I got forced retirement on a medical and live on a poverty-level fixed income (I got what should have been the last/best 20 years of my career yanked out from under me). I should have taken up a cheaper hobby. LOL