2007 Prius cold air intake
Would the Prius get better milage if it had a cold air intake on it?
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Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
Originally Posted by billynjoanna
(Post 126761)
Would the Prius get better milage if it had a cold air intake on it?
Recently, I developed a technique for measuring gasoline energy content but testing at 60F and 88F has not shown a significant change in ICE efficiency within the same tank. When the colder weather comes back, I'll re-run the tests with a wider temperature range. Bob Wilson |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
cold air intake is often a misnomer. they are very simply an exposed filter on a tube and may or may not provide cooler air entering the MAF sensor. on a prius they would be a waste of money i would think. i'm sure the prius engineers designed a very efficient airbox for your small displacement engine. keep your filter clean or throw in a k&n if it makes you happy. it will last the lifetime of your car (but require a re-oil every ~50K miles or so)
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Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
I agree. Cold air intakes are designed to add more oxygen, and create more horsepower, burning MORE GAS in the process.
Liquid gasoline does not burn. Only gasoline vapors burn. The colder the air/gas mixture, the more difficult it is vaporize to ignite, and you risk loosing more gas unburned out the exhaust. A WARMER air intake is going to be a more fuel efficient one. :shade:-John |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
actually, no. a cooler charge makes more hp and is more efficient. why do you think turbocharged engines are intercooled...
cooler air makes for better combustion (up to a point) & lower intake temps enable the engine to advance timing - hotter cylinder temps lead to predetonation/knock. if the cylinder temps are too high the engine ecu will compensate by making a richer mix in order to cool things down (more gas used). again, turbocharged engines will see this on a greater scale, but the same principle applies to NA engines as far as i know. |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
Lowering the resistance between the throttle plate and the outside won't change the part throttle fuel economy on a modern spark ignition car.In part throttle operation Any drop in resistance upstream is simply countered by closing the throttle plate;any increase in resistance is countered by opening it a little until the amount of mixture is what is required to pull the load.
In the sort of driving most folks do on this forum, you could tape about 20% of the air horn off,and you wouldn't be able to measure any change in FE. CAIs might improve peak hp(the ones commonly sold probably drop hp at many RPMs), but they won't improve FE on a modern car. Luck, Charlie |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
Sorry Pete. Everything you said goes against chemistry and physics.
I already said cold air intake systems provide more horsepower. This is at a cost of more fuel being burned. Any cold air intake is NOT designed for fuel economy. Don't take my word for it, and please don't argue with me and tell me I'm wrong. Go out and try it. |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
A cold air intake is a device used to bring lower temprature air into a car's internal- combustion engine to increase engine power and efficiency.cold air intake systems come in many different colors and sizes,and are easy to install when compared with other performance-increasing modifications.
Intakes are one of the most popular, easy and cost efficient options to improve your car’s speed and horsepower. quebec used car dealer |
Re: 2007 Prius cold air intake
Originally Posted by billynjoanna
(Post 126761)
Would the Prius get better milage if it had a cold air intake on it?
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