Description
When you’re putting in those long hours during planting or harvest, the last thing you want is engine trouble slowing you down. Clean oil is what keeps your engine running smooth and protected, and this Baldwin B7082 oil filter does the heavy lifting to trap all the dirt, metal particles, and combustion byproducts that try to turn your premium oil into engine-damaging sludge. It’s one of those parts you don’t think much about until you need it—but when it’s doing its job right, you’ll get thousands more hours of reliable operation.
What You’re Getting
- High-quality Baldwin filtration media that captures contaminants while maintaining steady oil flow
- Anti-drainback valve keeps oil in the engine when you shut down, so you get instant lubrication on startup
- Sturdy construction built to handle pressure spikes, temperature swings, and constant vibration
- Spin-on design makes oil changes quick and mess-free—just unscrew the old and thread on the new
- Quality gasket that seals tight and won’t leak or fail under pressure
Built for Real Farm Work
This filter is designed for tractors and equipment that see real agricultural and construction duty. Whether you’re running a utility tractor for chores around the place, operating heavy equipment for earth moving, or working a row-crop machine through marathon planting days, this filter handles the dust, heat, and vibration that comes with putting equipment to work. Baldwin has been making filters since tractors had steel wheels, and they know what it takes to keep engines running in tough conditions.
Made to Last
The filter media traps contaminants while maintaining proper oil flow, and the durable construction handles the pressure fluctuations and harsh conditions your equipment faces day after day. The reliable gasket ensures a leak-free seal that won’t give out when temperatures swing or vibration gets heavy during field work.
Installation Notes
This is a standard spin-on filter, so installation takes just a few minutes. Apply a thin coat of clean oil to the gasket before threading it on, then hand-tighten plus another three-quarters turn once the gasket contacts the mounting surface. Don’t over-tighten—it makes the next change harder and can damage the gasket.






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