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Cold air intake made an enjoyable difference!

13K views 40 replies 17 participants last post by  CodyKulas  
#1 ·
I installed a cold air intake on my car and it made a decent, and enjoyable difference to driving my car. Now i wouldnt necessarily call it "the right way to do things" but basically i just have a Spectre cone filter running off my stock housing until i get some money together to get some aftermarket piping to run off my turbo. After putting the filter on i took it for a drive and i could actually hear my turbo spooling and hear my BOV between shifts or when letting off the gas. At first i didnt know how it was suppose to sound INSIDE the car so i was freaking out at the noise it made. I then took the car to my step brothers house and asked him to ride with me and listen to it. He said "yeah its suppose to make that noise, thats your BOV" Well needless to say i just didnt know what it sounded like inside the car and had only heard BOV's outside turbo'd cars. Haha.

Like i said not necessarily the correct way to piece it together but it will do for now until i can make something better of it. 26 dollars later and about 5 minutes of labor and my job was complete. It sounds great and i want to say it gave me a little extra power but i am not sure, cause i know with a lot of new cars the computers dont like to recognize those things and you then have to get it dyno tuned, i could also be wrong on that but thats just what i've heard from my buddy who owns an '06 Pontiac GTO, which he's had to get it dyno tuned after puitting a CAI and Exhaust on.

If anyone has any suggestions where i can buy that pipe to run off my turbo or what may work in place of it without having to make something up myself feel free to help me out ;)
 
#6 ·
Well you can dyno tune and LS2, becuase if you couldnt he wouldnt have. haha. granted he only gained about 40 horse, but i know for a fact it was dyno tuned. but i am not gonna be the same old person that starts an argument everytime so ill leave it at that.
 
#3 ·
lots of products are in the works especially cold air intake kits. should be coming out in the next few weeks if that helps..and like stated above, from what ive read, chrysler computers are nearly impossible to crack for a tune
 
#4 ·
The computer in these cars is pretty good for kinda "auto-tuning" itself and adjusting different parameters based on conditions and inputs. I don't know this for a fact so don't quote me on it, but I would say that the computer adjusts automatically to the increased air flow... (which btw, an increase in airflow from an intake will definitely increase your power to some degree!) Power in an engine comes from the combustion of fuel which requires air... less air, less fuel can combust....more air, more fuel can combust. Hence the point of the turbo; and with BOV sounds now audible, I'd say that's proof enough that the air flow has increased a substantial amount.
 
#10 ·
The computer in these cars is pretty good for kinda "auto-tuning" itself and adjusting different parameters based on conditions and inputs. I don't know this for a fact so don't quote me on it, but I would say that the computer adjusts automatically to the increased air flow...
Eh, yes and no. There are long term and short term fuel trims which the computer can adjust "automatically" or "on the fly", however this is not really tuning and there are limits to the adjustability of the fuel trims. This is more of a prevention for knock or pre-detonation. With a CAI only, there really isn't a need to add a tune to the car, but if you start adding more air to the mix with other components, then you will require a tune. However, a proper tune can be more beneficial to performance than bolting on parts...even if it just a CAI.

My $0.02.
 
#9 ·
Well thanks guys, and like I said I'm not trying to argue cause it's a complete waste of time I was just saying I know my buddy did his GTO. I'm sure people will be dyno tuning their darts in no time. Somehow someway. Haha :)
 
#14 ·
A proper tune as in full ECU tune, and yes on a dyno. There is nothing out right now that can accomplish that. No one is offering a true tune for the car. Though I am talking to one of the leading European tuners to see if there is any similarities in the Abarth and Dart ECU, we shall see what comes out of that.
 
#16 ·
-I went to Oriellys bought a Spectre 3" conical filter where the end is also opened, a 2.25od to 2.5id exhaust pipe transition, and a 2.5" to 3" spectre coupler.
I removed the hard plastic piece from the coupler added it to the filter, then inserted the 2.5" pipe tightened it up the carefully wedged the 2.23od end into factory boot. With the stock airbox removed the open end of the filter sits neatly ontop of the fender air extracter feeding it fresh air.

I'm scouting the home improvement stores to find a decent looking thermal barrer to seperate it from the engine bay now.
 
#23 ·
Good luck getting that warranties. If they see its not a mopar product installed by a mopar dealer, and it caused your engine problem, it will void your warranty. Just warning you...if they see the aftermarket cone caused the problem, you have to pay to fix out of pocket.
 
#27 ·
I've dealt with Dealers and warranties with aftermarket parts. When I can out knowledge them about what they should know, they typically get quite drop their head and walk away.
I've even had GM from Detroit call me because the "General Manager" was so ignorant and didn't know his ass from a hole in the ground. They apologized all day and sent me a tin of cookies.-(very yummy btw)
I think they should have at least offered me his job!
 
#28 ·
I never said that it will cause the problem. But OP mentioned if it breaks they'll warranty it. If they realize changing the intake is what caused the engines failure it voids warranty. My step dad works at mopar hq and is in charge of accepting or denying warranty claims. This is info from him
 
#29 ·
MM supplies the ecu for the Abarth and the Dart,if they were different then the MM box would not work for the Dart. The Dart comes with the same tune as the esse esse Abarth in Europe. Even over there they use the piggyback because this Ecu responds and adapts well to mods. That added to the complexity of the Multiair programming is the reason you probably wont be seeing any full on ecu flashes For these cars.

Like was posted above, the dealer would have to prove that the intake causes the issue before they could deny the claim.
 
#30 ·
There is no way my filter is taking in 130 degree air from the engine. My filter is plenty far from the engine and it is sitting right over the air duct. And I got a solid 40 mpg on the highway last weekend and noticed a better spool of the turbo. So tell me how that's bad on the engine??
 
#31 ·
Get an ODBII scanner and watch your Air intake temps...bet you it is over 130 degrees that is measured at the MAF...just past your intake. When you think that is high watch your CAT temps!!!

While it may not be bad this week...
 
#32 ·
Somebody posted up once with their scan gauge thingie that the air intake temps were around 130 (at the MAF I think). That was with ambient of 100 with the stock air box (completely separate from engine bay). Just because the filter is sitting over the intake hole if its not protected in some way from the open engine bay it will be getting at least some of the heat from the motor. Maybe not a lot, but its gonna get at least a little and raise your overall intake temps a bit. May not affect performance, SF is just leery of "slapping" a cone filter on the end of the hose if you will. Wants to see a bit more work done on it :)
 
#33 ·
Understandable. Like I said, it's temporary, until i i can find a full pipe to run of the turbo without spending 300-600 dollars on a K&N, AEM, Mopar or anything else thats pricey. Any ideas would be appreciated :) And I weld at a stainless steel shop so I'm gonna see what I can do to make up a heat shield. And make it nice.
 
#34 ·
A couple pictures of your get up would be nice, I'm more of a visual person, pictures make it easy to understand. And I like em easy :)
 
#39 ·
Not really. The less the turbo has to work to make boost the less wear it has on the turbo. I don't think you will see "more" boost because its controlled by the PCM, so engine wear should be the same or less.