westvibes
Registered Member
Will installing a cold air intake on my 2009 Hyundai Genesis 3.8L, improve its fuel efficiency?
Will installing a cold air intake on my 2009 Hyundai Genesis 3.8L, improve its fuel efficiency?
No. Our vehicles already draw in air from outside of the hood. I like my factory CAI just fine.
Just a bit of clarification here, but "Cold air intake" not exactly meaning "cold air" literally, but in terms of "aftermarket intake" which I think he meant: Yes... a less restrictive, and freer flowing intake would, theoretically improve efficiency.
To add to that though: The thing people don't always understand is that opening things up in one little spot isn't always all it takes to get noticeable efficiency or power increases. Sure, an intake "should" help for sure, but until you start doing more like throttle body size increase, a freer flowing exhaust, a proper tune etc it's not going to be something you see in any major way at the pump.
anytime you let the engine breathe free you will get better milage
Maybe if the car has a carbureted engine (remember them?). In a fuel injected engine, with computer control, the amount of fuel injected is based on the actual amount of air that is entering the engine as measured by the MAF sensor.
Right..... so allowing more, denser air in at once will allow the controls to provide the right amount of fuel more efficiently. You can argue that opening up the intake/exhaust to allow better flow doesn't help efficiency or power on a fuel injected engine, that's fine. Just understand there is hard proof that you're 100% wrong.
Oh we're one of the high and mighty "I got degrees and clearly you didn't" people now? Well I'm going to keep my self respect and bow out. Not because you're better than me, but because arguing with someone who acts as such is pointless. Good day, captain big boss high and mighty great one.
If you make an engine breath easier, including computer controlled fuel injected engines, it will more easily produce power, and of course there is that increase in power from it. If you adjust your throttle input and driving habits to compensate for that, you will get better fuel economy. An intake alone will most likely do next to nothing, if anything at all, but the principals of better flowing intake/exhaust are universal even with computer controls. I'm fine with you having worked on cars your whole life(as have I), and even all your degrees and what have you, but this is something that I know is a fact, and I don't get how someone who claims such high knowledge would dispute something that has been proven time and time again. And yes, on fuel injected engines.
Intake is tuned already to work at different rpms to improve the flow. You can see two resonators at the plumbing from the filter box to the MAF and variable intake manifold geometry (4.6). If you think that dumb 8" pipe to the outside air would improve the fuel efficiency and power, why factory engineers bothered with all this stuff, when they fight for every 0.01mpg?
And BTW, your intake is already as cold air as it could be, unless you want to put the steamboat chimney 4' tall above the car.