siren676 wrote:gt4dude wrote:factory intakes are shit, you can prove it on a turbocharged engine by noting the 2 - 4 psi maximum boost increase by using a pod filter, would be closer to 6psi increase with a cold air pod filter.
On another note you can spend around $500 doing a cold air intake, which doesn't really sound like good gains per dollar spent..
Sound ridiculous? Well add up the cost of 2 gauge wire, battery box, terminals, pipes, bends, couplers and clamps before you get to the actual air box construction and you're already $300 into it and haven't made a single gain yet.
Don't let that deter you though, you can buy things bit by bit until you've finally achieved your goal and its one of the easiest and most satisfying modifications you can do yourself without major tools or jacking up the car.
I agree that factory airboxes are shit. They are designed to make the induction noise quieter by using resonance chambers which must disturb the airflow a bit.
I like buying things bit by bit as it it way easier (and less depressing) than paying in a large lump sum.
I may consider getting a small sealed battery to help in saving space for an airbox.
The factory air box is not as shit as people think.
In modern vehicle air box is well designed equipment which is very difficult to surpass in performance. Normally you would find that the resonance chambers are for fixing holes in the torque curve and not silencing it. When people play with air boxes, they change the whole flow and acoustic characteristics of the inlet system and modifying torque curve (and ultimately power curve). Yes of course you can gain power from a different air box, but generally whatever you gain, you loose in the bottom to mid range, which is more important.
Of course some manufacturers would make air boxes to be as cheap as possible, but lets not talk about Lada here.
Same thing applies to exhaust.
People approach modification from wrong end. First you should look into what actually increases power of the engine - increase how much air it can pump through. One way of doing it is increase RPM, another way of doing it is forcing more air through via secondary pump (supercharger or turbo).
If you increase RPM, your engine becomes restricted by cam timing, so you install bigger cams (which shifts the power band higher, but you get loses on the bottom end due to acoustic and flow dynamics).
Otherwise you will be spending thousands of dollars on mods that only return 1% at best on an average car.