Imo you won't see any gains having the cold air feed in the grill or foglight . Just run it down towards the wheel arch as per the original air feed . The engine sucks air , it's not forced so it will suck enough cold air from the wheel arch .If you go through very deep water and the air feed is in the grill or foglight then you might encounter a problem .
Imo you won't see any gains having the cold air feed in the grill or foglight . Just run it down towards the wheel arch as per the original air feed . The engine sucks air , it's not forced so it will suck enough cold air from the wheel arch .If you go through very deep water and the air feed is in the grill or foglight then you might encounter a problem .
Complete rubbish.
Stick your head out the car window at 60 mph and open your mouth wide facing the flow of air. then try it with your mouth facing downwards. Come back and tell us what got more air in your mouth lol
Its pretty obvious your going to get more air pointing something directly in the flow of air rather than hiding it.
As for water problem unless your driving through a ford you wont have a problem (based on CAF pointing at the IK)
The fact is you can't force air in . The engine sucks the air in , it can only take in as much as the size of the throttle body will allow . Even if your driving at 60mph , the air forced up the cold air feed hits a huge restriction , the air filter itself , so any pressure is lost . It's a totally pointless exercise imo .
Also if you have the CAF in the grill or foglight and your in slow moving traffic your going to be directly sucking up lovely warm exhaust gases from the guys car in front
The fact is you can't force air in . The engine sucks the air in , it can only take in as much as the size of the throttle body will allow . Even if your driving at 60mph , the air forced up the cold air feed hits a huge restriction , the air filter itself , so any pressure is lost . It's a totally pointless exercise imo .
Also if you have the CAF in the grill or foglight and your in slow moving traffic your going to be directly sucking up lovely warm exhaust gases from the guys car in front
Engines SHOULDNT suck. if they are sucking there is a restriction somewhere in the intake, be it the filter or the manifold etc etc. the way the engine works is it uses atmospheric pressure to fill the cylinder. so if there is a restriction in the intakeits then creatring a higher vacuum.
Also on the caf front, you want it in an area of high pressure. ideally the scuttle.
the inlet temperature does matter to fred cos the colder the air the denser it is and this has more oxygen in it than warm air which makes for a better explosion/combustion.
What is the pipe size for the standard renault airbox?
The fact is you can't force air in . The engine sucks the air in , it can only take in as much as the size of the throttle body will allow . Even if your driving at 60mph , the air forced up the cold air feed hits a huge restriction , the air filter itself , so any pressure is lost . It's a totally pointless exercise imo .
Also if you have the CAF in the grill or foglight and your in slow moving traffic your going to be directly sucking up lovely warm exhaust gases from the guys car in front
these cars like constant airflow, forcing air in there is'nt going to help
I was also thinking of placing one in foglight but dirt+water got me worrying. Eventually people with more technical background told me about the airflow being best when it comes from a place where it's constant (example wheelarch, original setup) .
With the foglight CAF you'll be getting a lot when speeding, but when slower it'll be less so not ideally constant..
I've been fiddling with different airinakes this week and really the original setup does it best, BUT a little bigger size CAF or even removing one did even better.
When for example trying an open filter (carbon heat-shield trumpet) system right at the front bumper/grill i lost bigtime torque, sluggish throttle response and fuel milage went terrible. I could see the fuelgauge go down on hard driving..
so too much air was NO GOOD, my experience anyway..
This is discussed to death, just thought i'd share my findings