Turbine engines to diesel engines... huh? I already know about cool air on turbine engines. I spent my time in the Corps flying around in the United States largest helicopter, the CH53, which is powered by 3 of them, 4 if you count the turbine engine used to start the other 3. Cooler air also makes my drag car pick up a couple tenths. Cooler air also makes my old pulling tractor have more giddy up. High altitude air makes for low power on everything and also will not allow the CH53 to pick up as much weight because the rotor blades are turning in thin air and cant get any lift. What this has to do with a diesel engine, I have no clue? Cool air IS good for a diesel engine guys. My original post states that intake temps between 60-90 degrees are ideal. That is cool air to a""stock"" diesel engine. Naturally the more fuel mods you have, the cooler you can go, say 40-50 degrees. This is all general applicable information. If you are pouring more fuel into the equation, then YES you can run cooler intake air temps... that's a no brainer, but if your engine is stock, cooler intake temps are going to lessen your power output and lessen the amount of fuel burnt in the process.
This debate has taken a wrong turn someplace. The original insight I was trying to give away was that...
A. Ideal intake temps for a diesel engine is between 60-90 degrees.
B. Remove your so called "ram air" systems in the winter to help improve combustion efficiency.
C. For every drop in intake temps by 20 deg, you drop combustion temps by 60 deg at the top of the compression stroke.
"Chad" is not right or wrong. All Chad is doing is taking information not known by many from the diesel testing environment on a big scale and blending it with already established diesel facts from field test and relaying that information here to you. The original author wanted to know the difference between taking air in from under the hood via holes drilled into the stock airbox, or taking air in from outside. Someone stated that under the hood air is hot and therefor ultimately lowers performance. That's when I chimed in to demonstrate A, B, and C above, and from there we dove into all sorts of different situations. In the authors situation with a stock truck (planning on buying doesn't make it modified until the enhancements are added in my book) putting a psychotty system in will not do much more than a stock K&N filter in the airbox, AND with a stock truck the airbox is the better way to go financially and mechanically. Start adding DDIII's, VA's, and PE boxes on the #3 setting and YES the obvious choice is a more freely flowing air system like the psychotty that taps into cooler air environments. With that said is there anyone that doesn't agree with A, B, or C applied to a stock engine?
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