keplaffintech
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- Oct 28, 2020
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Upgrading the intakes on the Stinger are done for sound, aesthetics, and performance. Let's focus on performance.
The performance increase supposedly comes from these factors:
More peak power/tq due to colder air
Lowering the temperature of the air reaching the intake manifold will allow you to create more power for the same PSI of boost. Awesome!
But some of these intake systems look like they pull less cold air than the stock system. They have pod filters that are open to the engine bay and sometimes without heat shields. The stock system is well designed to pull in cold air, how do aftermarket intakes do better?
More peak power/tq due to less restriction
This is the part that doesn't make sense to me.
If you want more power in a turbocharged car, you can increase the boost, reduce the intake temps, or advance the timing. Less restriction won't change timing or reduce temps on its own, so the idea is that by less restriction we should get more PSI of boost. However, this is false, as boost is controlled by the ECU operating the wastegate. If you want more boost the only way to get it is to program the ECU to request a higher target. Intakes are not the restriction for boost, the artificial limit set by the ECU is.
You can't trick the ECU with an intake, as the ECU is measuring actual boost pressure and adjusting the wastegate to keep it at target. A piggyback just scales the actual and target measurements so you can't 'trick' the piggyback with an intake either.
Faster turbo spool / better throttle response (due to less restriction).
So this is the last thing that intakes could help with. This wouldn't change dyno peak power numbers. My understanding of turbos is that the intake size or filtering isn't really going to be a restriction here. It's the volume of exhaust gasses that pass through the turbine that is going to limit how fast we spool.
What am I missing?
The performance increase supposedly comes from these factors:
More peak power/tq due to colder air
Lowering the temperature of the air reaching the intake manifold will allow you to create more power for the same PSI of boost. Awesome!
But some of these intake systems look like they pull less cold air than the stock system. They have pod filters that are open to the engine bay and sometimes without heat shields. The stock system is well designed to pull in cold air, how do aftermarket intakes do better?
More peak power/tq due to less restriction
This is the part that doesn't make sense to me.
If you want more power in a turbocharged car, you can increase the boost, reduce the intake temps, or advance the timing. Less restriction won't change timing or reduce temps on its own, so the idea is that by less restriction we should get more PSI of boost. However, this is false, as boost is controlled by the ECU operating the wastegate. If you want more boost the only way to get it is to program the ECU to request a higher target. Intakes are not the restriction for boost, the artificial limit set by the ECU is.
You can't trick the ECU with an intake, as the ECU is measuring actual boost pressure and adjusting the wastegate to keep it at target. A piggyback just scales the actual and target measurements so you can't 'trick' the piggyback with an intake either.
Faster turbo spool / better throttle response (due to less restriction).
So this is the last thing that intakes could help with. This wouldn't change dyno peak power numbers. My understanding of turbos is that the intake size or filtering isn't really going to be a restriction here. It's the volume of exhaust gasses that pass through the turbine that is going to limit how fast we spool.
What am I missing?

