SKU: 25399852347

SuperTech Cabin Air Filter 5505, Replacement Air/Dust Filter for GM

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Description

SuperTech Cabin Air Filter 5505, Replacement Air/Dust Filter for GMCabin air filter with high efficiency and air flow from SuperTech Replacement cabin air filter for: Chevrolet Silverado (2014 18) (GM 22808781) Equivalent filter size to: FRAM CF11809 K&N VF2044 STP CAF1914P Actual filter size: 9. 82 x 9. 5 inches Filters pollen and other particles from your cabin for up to 2 years or 20,000 miles Installs easily in minutes, with a guaranteed perfect fit Premium, Easy to Replace Cabin Air Filter Air filters are an

Cabin air filter with high efficiency and air flow from SuperTech
Replacement cabin air filter for:
Chevrolet Silverado (2014-18) (GM 22808781)
Equivalent filter size to:
FRAM CF11809
K&N VF2044
STP CAF1914P
Actual filter size: 9.82 x 9.5 inches
Filters pollen and other particles from your cabin for up to 2 years or 20,000 miles
Installs easily in minutes, with a guaranteed perfect fit
Premium, Easy-to-Replace Cabin Air Filter

Air filters are an important part of your vehicle, delivering clean, breathable air through the cabin AC vents. Care for your car with a SuperTech replacement cabin air filter. You can change your cabin filter in minutes with three simple steps:

Locate your vehicle's cabin air filter. In many vehicles, the filter is located in or behind the glove box. Check your owner's manual to find the exact location.
Remove and dispose of used cabin air filter.
Replace with new cabin air filter.
You should change your cabin air filter annually, or every 20,000 miles, or more frequently when driving in conditions where dust, pollutants, or allergens are heavy. Our air filters are guaranteed to fit, and keep you breathing clean air for up to 2 years.

Superior Performance Cabin Air Filters from SuperTech

SuperTech air filters are tested per ISO/TS11155-1 international test procedures to meet or surpass your vehicle's filter requirements. Our innovative technology and manufacture give SuperTech air filters superior performance and features, including:

Fully synthetic filtration media for high efficiency and high air flow rates
Particle removal to less than one micron
Optimized contaminant holding capacity
Temperature tested from extreme -40° cold weather to 250°F parked cabin conditions
Documented field testing for long life
This 9.82 x 9.5 inch filter fits Chevrolet Silverado (2014-18) (GM 22808781). Choosing the best cabin air filter for your vehicle can go a long way toward keeping your car's ventilation system running smoothly. Breathe a little easier with SuperTech!

Filter Pollen, Dust, and Other Particles from the Air You Breathe!

Your vehicle's cabin air filter catches dust, pollen, and other debris in the air, stopping it from making its way into your car. And if you have allergies or other respiratory problems, it's what helps make your car cabin breathable and comfortable to be in. SuperTech cabin air filters keep the air in your car clean and free of allergens and dust for up to 2 years!

How to Tell if you Need a New Cabin Air Filter

Perhaps the easiest way to know if you need a new cabin air filter is to check its coloration. A new cabin air filter should be white or off-white. Be sure to check your filter in the light of day or with a flashlight, so you can more easily see dust, pollen, and other particles. If you need a replacement cabin air filter for your vehicle, look no further than this SuperTech 5505 filter for GM vehicles.

Get SuperTech oil, air, and cabin filters right here on Walmart.com, or check if they're in-store at a Walmart near you.

SuperTech cabin air filters have high efficiency and air flow
Removes pollen, dust, and other particles before they enter your vehicle?s ventilation system
Fits models Chevrolet Silverado (2014-18) (GM 22808781)
Optimized contaminant holding capacity
Replacement air filter with superior cabin air protection
Performance for up to 2 years or 20,000 miles
Installs easily in minutes, with a guaranteed perfect fit
Choose SuperTech for powerful protection you can rely on, mile after mile

 

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SKU: 25399852347

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4.8 ★★★★★
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C
Verified Purchase
cloud-learner
Cuba, US
★★★★★ 3
have some good contents but too general
Format: Paperback
The book covers some good points, but overall, it's too general.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2024
E
Verified Purchase
Engineer Dude
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 3
Why Politics in a Tech Book????
Format: Kindle
Well... I'm surprised to see the book blatently calls out its dedication to Black Lives Matter, which is in all caps so I assume it's referring to the political organization. It goes on to speak of 2020 being the year of an "awakening of injustices of systematic racism"... I thought I was buying a technical book??? Had I known this political bs was included I wouldn't have purchased it! However, I bought and I'm still reading it. If the politics goes away and the TECHNICAL content is good I'll update my review.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 13, 2020
P
Verified Purchase
PeaceBee
New York, US
★★★★★ 2
Not good use of time
Format: Paperback
It’s not clear who this book targets - neither experts nor novice will benefit. There are expert perspectives, only few of these are helpful, rest are too generic to be of any use. For instance the last entry is one an engineer who shares how she went from zero to expert in cloud engineering in six months but fails to mention a single resource or pathway for others to follow.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on April 2, 2022
N
Nilendu Misra
Port Orchard, US
★★★★★ 3
Uneven compendium of tips and insights, but still very useful
Format: Kindle, Format: Kindle
“In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are not" is why such bottom-up insights and lessons from the field are the fastest way to learn real life stuff. This series had a GREAT start with "Engineering Management" - I guess because it is way more subjective than Cloud Engineering and offered a variety of non-overlapping POVs. This one is a mixed bag, perhaps because "Cloud Engineering" was perceived amorphously by the authors. The scope was broad - from cloud-native (architecture), to cloud-ready (topology), to cloud-operations, to choosing tech (e.g., Lambda/serverless), to -ilities and economics -- it is like celebrating Halloween, Christmas and Labor Day together in a single long weekend. I would give it 4/+ stars if at least 25% of such a book was "superb", giving 3 because about 10% of the book is. That still leaves 10 solid insights or learning that would otherwise take many failures to learn. And failures, especially in this emerging domain of complexity, is VERY expensive. Would love to see more books like this. Let's summarize some key insights - -- Real-time visibility across the entire DevOps lifecycle is key to winning in cloud. -- Operations, especially operations at scale, is extremely hard. So, wherever possible, use Managed Services. -- Distinguish between "availability" and "uptime" and measure each separately, and concretely. -- In FaaS/Serverless, calling a function synchronously increases debugging complexity. -- Good code is like good joke - it needs no explanation. -- "Building your app or platform on top of the abstractions that a cloud provider gives you does not make the underlying layers stop existing. In many cases, it makes them even more important." That makes the failure modes LESS obvious than we were used to. Therefore having "extreme visibility" into your systems will help "separate the issues at the layer you're focused on from the fundamental system issues". i.e., just because what was under the hood is now even less visible, don't forget them. Many recent "cloud failures" have been in networking fault domains. -- Cloud is not optimized for replacing static infrastructures. -- Containers, service meshes and serverless jumpstart dev productivity but they also change the attack surface of apps and infra. -- "Number of containers that are alive for 10 sec or less has doubled to 22%". 73% of all containers live for 30 minutes or less. -- Adopt an "assume breach" stance for everything. Have a break-glass account. -- Ensure you have a thorough understanding of where and how secrets are secured. -- Grey failures (transient degradation of services) are often worse than complete crashes, since the latter have a short feedback loop. -- Resilience engineering has existed as a sub-discipline within safety sciences. We just recently started applying its concepts in technology. Resilience can be thought of as a "socio-technical system" with Robustness ("system X has property Y that is robust in sense Z to perturbation W"); Reliability (consistent operations or service levels); Rebound (ability to deal with a chaotic situation using structures developed AND deployed BEFORE the chaos). In other words, robustness protects systems against a SPECIFIC type of failure mode. When a system is robust in many dimensions, it approaches good resilience to failure. -- Resilience is something you "do", not something you "have". Resilience is a verb. -- Moving from one class of nines to the next is 10 times more expensive. -- Production System really means "system that someone else, anyone else, can hold you accountable for". -- Most common theme across incidents is that something, somewhere was surprising. -- Incidents are unplanned investments...your challenge is to maximize ROI. -- We used to think of scale in two dimensions - horizontal (more) and vertical (bigger). In cloud, think of "scale out" (when demands increase) and "scale in" (when demand decreases). -- Architecture diagram is also a map of failure modes. -- Async communication is a friend of Cloud Reliability. -- Test in production is a competitive advantage. The complexity of traffic patterns going through high-scale production systems is increasingly harder to reproduce in a controlled env. -- Hundreds of open issues is fine, but if the repo has gone months (or, years!) without a release, THAT is a warning sign. -- It is hard to write good tests for bad code. -- Platforms come and go. But first principles and patterns will always exist, because they are the ones and zeros.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on November 6, 2023
M
M. Klocker
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 2
Shallow, biased and significantly overpriced
Format: Paperback
Well, this purchase was a disappointment. 20% of the pages are dedicated to just highlighting the bios and backgrounds of the many different authors that contributed this great wisdom. And let me be clear, the authors are solid. They are professionals with credible backgrounds and experience. But it's the format and constraints of this book that makes it virtually impossible for that to shine through. Because the rest of the book (80%) is dedicated to the so called "97 things every cloud engineer should know". And unfortunately the average length of one of these "things" is about 1.5 pages long, and as such extremely shallow and in about 30% of the cases straight up promotions for specific company services. You will find Google cloud advocates telling you to use managed services, of Google of course. AWS engineers telling you to avoid them and use IaaS. LaunchDarkly employees telling you to use feature flags. The list goes on. The TL;DR: here is that if you have built anything on the cloud in the last 2 years, this book is going to be a waste of your time and money. You are better of googling: "cloud best practices" and dedicating 2h to reading the first 10 non-ad related search results.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 23, 2022

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