Wecome to the thread and Forum.
Cobb SRI.
It works.
Stays relatively clean in comparison to any CAI.
It's cheaper.
It's easier to install.
It's easier to clean when you need to clean it.
It won't void your warranty. (Nor would any other aftermarket CAI/SRI.)
You get a cool COBB sticker.
CAI are a great increase because you're sucking up colder air from below the car than the SRI which sits in the engine bay were all the heat is found. So in the long run SRI could be worse for the performance of the car. AEM's CAI is rated at 25+ hp 30+ tq but you also pay $330 for it i would choose AEM over SRi imo
the main issue is that we have a turbocharged car, and when you compress the air to 15psi (on the order of 200F) and then cool it down again with the intercooler, the difference in manifold air temp is not very big at all when comparing a CAI vs a SRI. if you want cold temps for your engine, worry more about your intercooler than your SRI/CAI. the SRI/CAI's main contribution to our car is to simply reduce intake restriction that the stock box made.
EDIT:
it's in NA cars where CAIs make a much more noticeable difference over a SRI, since the air from the intake in a NA car goes straight to the engine without being heated/cooled some more.
i didnt get a cool COBB sticker?! i got a license plate frame though...
the main issue is that we have a turbocharged car, and when you compress the air to 15psi (on the order of 200F) and then cool it down again with the intercooler, the difference in manifold air temp is not very big at all when comparing a CAI vs a SRI. if you want cold temps for your engine, worry more about your intercooler than your SRI/CAI. the SRI/CAI's main contribution to our car is to simply reduce intake restriction that the stock box made.
EDIT:
it's in NA cars where CAIs make a much more noticeable difference over a SRI, since the air from the intake in a NA car goes straight to the engine without being heated/cooled some more.
You guys are missing a critical piece of this puzzle. You keep saying that because the air is compressed and then run through an IC the intake temp doesn't matter. That just isn't true. The cooler the air is to begin with, the more there will be of it to expand and condense in the turbo an IC. Regardless of what happens post intake, the cooler the air is entering the intake, the better.
That all said, I have a Cobb SRI and love it. Once you're moving, the intake temp is nearly identical between the SRI and a CAI. Only at a stop does it make any difference at all.
void Voided Voided void your warranty.
Geez. Blackhole is forming... (poke)
What if- My engine blew up or got a turbo leak, and then I put my stock intake back on, and then towed the car to the dealership. Will they refute my claim? Do they have CSI investigators looking for evidence that the stock intake was just recently replaced? Will they call COBB distributers and ask them if I purchased an intake from them? Will they get a court order to search my house for the intake? Will they scan through saved MAP readings or whatever in the ECU and say "A-HA, you were using an SRI. COBB to be exact. Warranty Denied."? I doubt it.
But seriously... if Mazda made an aftermarket CAI for the dang car, I doubt a simple SRI bolt-on is going to cause it to self-destruct. Hence, SRI owners fear not from the "I'm-scared-I'm-going-to-lose-my-Warranty-mentality." The world may end, but it won't be because your car engine died from bolting on an aftermarket intake. (bang)
Be smarter than the dealer. They might all be a$$holes, but there are plenty of dumb ones out there too. That's all I got to say about that.