Originally posted by Prairie Dog
Noise-wise you can hear a little more turbo whine but thats all. It's well made and should easily reduce egt's. I would sure like to hear some comments on this dyno dilemma!
There is really only two ways to make power with a diesel pickup truck: add fuel, or burn what you got more efficiently.
Thats it, thats all you got for options.
So in order for an air system to build power, 1 or all of the following conditions must exist or must be met:
1) The current air intake must be sooooo restrictive that it is completely starving the engine for air. This isn't the case on the 03 Cummins. Its a terrible airbox, but at stock power levels, its not a complete restriction.
2) The increased airflow must be seen by the ECM, and fueling levels adjusted appropriately. On gassers and the Duramax, this is handled by a Mass Airflow Sensor. Increase your air, the ECM automatically adjusts fueling levels to ensure you are getting an efficient burn. Again, the 03 Cummins does not have a MAF. We have a IAT/Air Pressure sensor mounted to the airbox. This sensor can influence fueling somewhat, as its intended purpose is to dynamically adjust fueling levels based on ambient air pressure. In other words, as your truck's elevation changes, the fueling curve is adjusted to ensure you are maintaining what Dodge has felt is a proper burn (on the factory trucks, its not an efficient burn, its minimum particulate emission burn, which is not necessarily the same thing).
The IAT/AP sensor on the Dodge trucks does appear to have some influence on fueling. This can be evidenced by EGTs and higher RPM horsepower. During our testing of the Ram Air III, we noticed about a 150F drop in EGTs at mid RPM cruise speeds. At higher speeds (but constant throttle position), we noticed about a 200F drop. At wide open throttle, the exhaust gas temperature reductions all but disappeared and the truck was running close to stock temps (25 - 50F reductions), however our 60 - 100 mph times were reduced by a decent margin, which indicated about a 20 HP boost. If you removed the coefficient of drag of the truck, and corrected the values, you'd maybe see that come up to 30 HP, but I doubt it. Turbo spoolup was also markedly faster with an aftermarket filter, which is a no-brainer, as oiled filters allow more flow, therefore the turbo doesn't have to work as hard to pull air.
So what does this mean? The IAT/AP sensor obviously has an effect on fueling. Increasing airflow past the IAT/AP seems to fool it into believing you are running at a different elevation, and thus it increases fueling. But the effect appears to be minimal at constant throttle settings. At wide open throttle, or under acceleration, there appears to be a larger effect, but still nothing to write home about. We've moved the IAT/AP all over the air tube and air system, and even completely blocked it off from airflow, and saw very minimal changes (aforementioned approx 20 HP). And this isn't just with the Ram Air. We've tried it with stock boxes, and filters simply crammed under the hood, a'la BHAF.
Soooo, what this really boils down to is that the air systems on 03 Dodges will be relegated to the same role that they were on the 02's and down. To provide clean, smooth, directed airflow to a properly mated turbocharger. Airbox HP gains on 02's and down were relegated to minor 10 HP values, easily within the realm of dyno error or turbo spoolup fooling the inertial. Any HP gains that may be seen from an 03 airbox, whether its a Bully or our own Ram Air, will be quickly offset by fueling/timing boxes and turbochargers, so you'll want to choose the airbox that provides the turbo with all the air it wants in an efficient manner.