Darth Vader
Member
I bought a second filter, to turn my AEM CAI into an SRI, because I can and, I thought, wouldn't it be nice to have some actual data to finally answer the which one is better pissing match that has occurred here and elsewhere, in the past.
Here's the data I collected via Dashhawk and, my analysis:
Acceleration differences between CAI and SRI, negligible. I ran today, in 4th, 80 km/h to 140 km/h, at least 3 times each setup, all straight to WOT, same road, same environmental conditions. All turned in low to mid 6 second range. Couldn't really stretch it any harder/longer b/c of traffic and 6-7 degrees C making load cut a problem.
Interestingly, the SRI mode on the AEM is alot quieter than the Cobb SRI I had before.
Noticeably higher was the spike in underhood IAT when stopped. We're talking picking up 30 degrees in a minute here, as opposed to the ~5 on the CAI. Oddly, it still takes each the same time to return to it's base temp, about 10-15 seconds, despite the large temp difference. Temps while running were always over ambient with the SRI (~55 F), whereas the CAI would drop to indicated ambient or a touch below. The temp rise when stopped is not ideal at the track, definitely run hood up in staging if you have an SRI there.
So, all in all, the SRI has a tiny advantage in tip-in feel, no loss of acceleration, even up high and, a tendency to heat up when stopped. The CAI maintains its low IAT colossally longer than the SRI, which is an advantage at the track in reduced hassle in staging. Both measurably accelerate the same or as near as makes no difference.
Here's the data I collected via Dashhawk and, my analysis:
Acceleration differences between CAI and SRI, negligible. I ran today, in 4th, 80 km/h to 140 km/h, at least 3 times each setup, all straight to WOT, same road, same environmental conditions. All turned in low to mid 6 second range. Couldn't really stretch it any harder/longer b/c of traffic and 6-7 degrees C making load cut a problem.
Interestingly, the SRI mode on the AEM is alot quieter than the Cobb SRI I had before.
Noticeably higher was the spike in underhood IAT when stopped. We're talking picking up 30 degrees in a minute here, as opposed to the ~5 on the CAI. Oddly, it still takes each the same time to return to it's base temp, about 10-15 seconds, despite the large temp difference. Temps while running were always over ambient with the SRI (~55 F), whereas the CAI would drop to indicated ambient or a touch below. The temp rise when stopped is not ideal at the track, definitely run hood up in staging if you have an SRI there.
So, all in all, the SRI has a tiny advantage in tip-in feel, no loss of acceleration, even up high and, a tendency to heat up when stopped. The CAI maintains its low IAT colossally longer than the SRI, which is an advantage at the track in reduced hassle in staging. Both measurably accelerate the same or as near as makes no difference.
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