CAI in the winter
if anything, the winter will make your CAI work better, with the air being even colder in the winter.... meaning more dense for compression (obviously)
Hey KitCoupe... let me know when you get the ride back. I want to see how much of a difference you notice with that valve. lol.gif I might get one. It's wet a LOT up here....
Hey KitCoupe... let me know when you get the ride back. I want to see how much of a difference you notice with that valve. lol.gif I might get one. It's wet a LOT up here....
<div class='quotetop'>QUOTE (The_Alpha_Male)</div><div class='quotemain'>if anything, the winter will make your CAI work better, with the air being even colder in the winter.... meaning more dense for compression (obviously)
Hey KitCoupe... let me know when you get the ride back. I want to see how much of a difference you notice with that valve. lol.gif I might get one. It's wet a LOT up here....</div>
your cai will be fine how ever if your in a area where its likely your filter maybecome over saturated or prone to flooding of any sort i would invest in an aem bypass valve.
Hey KitCoupe... let me know when you get the ride back. I want to see how much of a difference you notice with that valve. lol.gif I might get one. It's wet a LOT up here....</div>
your cai will be fine how ever if your in a area where its likely your filter maybecome over saturated or prone to flooding of any sort i would invest in an aem bypass valve.
My concern isn't water or temperature (cold air should be a good thing, not bad), but how heavily roads in my area get salted. I'm worried about salt being deposited on the filter and destroying it. I was actually planning on only using the elbow from my CAI this winter to protect the filter, which is the reason I bought a 2-piece CAI and not a 1-piece. And why I had an Injen on my last car.



