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I love these posts, because they're mostly nonsense. Properly maintained they filter just fine. I've ran one in my off road rig for almost 13 years now, 150k miles on it, never an issue even in silty dusty conditions. UOA's always come back clean and free of silica.running a K&N is pretty much like not running a filter at all.
I've had more K&N filters dust an engine then you can shake a stick at,and i don't go off road. Their oiled filters are the worst. You're better off with a non-oiled filter then an oiled filterI love these posts, because they're mostly nonsense. Properly maintained they filter just fine. I've ran one in my off road rig for almost 13 years now, 150k miles on it, never an issue even in silty dusty conditions. UOA's always come back clean and free of silica.
The problem is people improperly oil them.
how is the air metered? I know the Hemi's are SD tuned which means there is no MAF. The air is not metered and is guessed by the ECM based on MAP readings. It would be @$$ backwards for FCA to go MAF on a turbo or boosted motor being that everyone switches to SD when they boost for good reason.This has been talked about endlessly on this forum.
These engines are computer controlled. The air is metered. It's only going to allow so much air in regardless of what intake is installed. You are not getting any performance increase without a tune.
The hurricane uses MAF.how is the air metered? I know the Hemi's are SD tuned which means there is no MAF. The air is not metered and is guessed by the ECM based on MAP readings. It would be @$$ backwards for FCA to go MAF on a turbo or boosted motor being that everyone switches to SD when they boost for good reason.
The gen 3 Hemi uses a speed density system to calculate air mass and adjust timing. It does this by engine speed, intake air temperature and pressure. Theoretically, if you could ram cold outside air directly in to the manifold you "might" see a slight benefit, with a caveat. But the fuel mapping will not have changed, so at most you'd see optimum conditions the fuel map would allow. Which means you would not see a single HP over stock as that is what the stock programming is programmed to output. Otherwise you would be in a lean condition or pulling timing.how is the air metered? I know the Hemi's are SD tuned which means there is no MAF. The air is not metered and is guessed by the ECM based on MAP readings. It would be @$$ backwards for FCA to go MAF on a turbo or boosted motor being that everyone switches to SD when they boost for good reason.
There isn't an aftermarket CAI that will deliver 20° to 30° colder air than the stock set up.If you can grab 20-30* cooler air that's less heat that needs to be removed from the A2W intercooling,
Nitrous and turbo's go hand in hand,wonder how one of them would perform with a 75 shot,lolThere isn't an aftermarket CAI that will deliver 20° to 30° colder air than the stock set up.
Probably the best recourse to get colder charge air temps would be to relocate the factory intercooler radiator and add fans to cool the intercooler glycol as cold as outdoor ambient will allow. Maybe rig up a water spray for intercooler radiator during the hot months. Take it to the next step and spray a water/methanol mixture to cool the charge air.
The ONLY place a cold air intake makes power is on a dyno with the hood up and a shop fan blowing into the engine. It is the biggest shiny bobble that makes the most money off of ignorant people.K&N is claiming an HP and torque gain as a result of their Cold Air Intake parts. The RHO has an OEM version that does not produce any gain. I believe they said it moves the HP/Torque down lower on the RPM curve. Do any of you have this installed? Does it work? Is there a danger adding too much HP/Torque? See the claim below.
Nitrous and turbo's go hand in hand,wonder how one of them would perform with a 75 shot,lol
Definitely will want an E85 tune if your gonna spray!Nitrous and turbo's go hand in hand,wonder how one of them would perform with a 75 shot
Or 100+ octane,lol.Not much in the way of E85 up here,so you'd want to pull some timing to use 91 or 93Definitely will want an E85 tune if your gonna spray!
Nitrous creates instant exhaust heat,so a turbo spools up faster. I ran nitrous on a turbo car back when i was a broke ass kid,as it was a cheap/easy way to combat the boost lag the early turbo's hadMight as well throw on some water injection while you're in there, lol
I love these posts, because they're mostly nonsense. Properly maintained they filter just fine. I've ran one in my off road rig for almost 13 years now, 150k miles on it, never an issue even in silty dusty conditions. UOA's always come back clean and free of silica.
The problem is people improperly oil them.
Nitrous creates instant exhaust heat,so a turbo spools up faster. I ran nitrous on a turbo car back when i was a broke ass kid,as it was a cheap/easy way to combat the boost lag the early turbo's had