Jump to content
  • Sign Up

Duramax cold air intake


Recommended Posts

Posted

Anyone put a cold air intake on their 2015 with stock exhausts yet? I'm not expecting much of anything for power/mpg increase, more just curious if it makes the turbo whistle Anymore noticeable

Posted

Don't know what it will do on a stock LML, but it makes a decent amount of difference on my tuned and deleted LML

Posted

You want to decrease the temp of the air going thru the fresh air side of the turbo and into the intercooler, the best thing is a turbo blanket. I do not have a Dmax, but I ran turbo blankets on my Jeep Liberty diesel, my Cummins ISX, and my Detroit 60. doing so will improve exhaust flow (and lower EGT's typically by 100-200 degrees on hard pulls), lower temp in engine compartment, and decrease the temps on the fresh air side of the turbo by 20-30 degrees easily, which improves air density quite a bit. Lots of heat from the exhaust side of the turbo radiates to the cool side. You blanket the hot side and this is eliminated. After running turbo blankets for over a decade, I would have it no other way. No, you are not going to destroy a turbo by putting a blanket on it. One of my turbos has over 400,000 miles on it and nary a problem, and it has had a blanket on it since day one.

 

Check out the heat testing videos on this link....

 

http://ptpturboblankets.com/video_installation.php

Posted

You want to decrease the temp of the air going thru the fresh air side of the turbo and into the intercooler, the best thing is a turbo blanket. I do not have a Dmax, but I ran turbo blankets on my Jeep Liberty diesel, my Cummins ISX, and my Detroit 60. doing so will improve exhaust flow (and lower EGT's typically by 100-200 degrees on hard pulls), lower temp in engine compartment, and decrease the temps on the fresh air side of the turbo by 20-30 degrees easily, which improves air density quite a bit. Lots of heat from the exhaust side of the turbo radiates to the cool side. You blanket the hot side and this is eliminated. After running turbo blankets for over a decade, I would have it no other way. No, you are not going to destroy a turbo by putting a blanket on it. One of my turbos has over 400,000 miles on it and nary a problem, and it has had a blanket on it since day one.

 

Check out the heat testing videos on this link....

 

http://ptpturboblankets.com/video_installation.php

Good luck getting to the turbo and installing a blanket...

 

This isn't a semi we are talking about, it is a V8 that has the turbo stuffed into the firewall.

Posted

Well, the Jeep Liberty Diesel I had, the turbo was in a very difficult position. That was a lot of motor crammed into a tight engine compartment. I had to remove several items to get to the turbo. If one actually wants to do something like this, they will find a way to do it. If they are dead set against doing something like this, they will never be convinced how much of a benefit it is. Those of us that have done the turbo blankets know better.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Forum Statistics

    248.1k
    Total Topics
    2.6m
    Total Posts
  • Member Statistics

    337,528
    Total Members
    8,960
    Most Online
    haziqkhan
    Newest Member
    haziqkhan
    Joined
  • Who's Online   5 Members, 0 Anonymous, 400 Guests (See full list)



×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use.