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View Poll Results: Should Cooleeze create a CAI option for the MKIII?
Yes 3 100.00%
No 0 0%
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Old 02-01-2008, 04:40 AM   #1
supramacist
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Well for 200 bucks. Thats not bad.
Matter of fact it may the ultimate.

No one I know of makes these things.
k and n makes an fipk.

And someone else makes filters to go on right there where the stock filter
is applied.

Other than that. Everyone makes there own basically.

It looks like a nice rig even though it's on e bay.

That is the closest thing I have seen to a real cai that wasn't jimmy rigged.
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Old 02-01-2008, 05:14 AM   #2
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i have been trying to find picutres of people who have the K&N installed.... didnt seem like it did much other than stick a filter on where the air box used to be

Not saying that one for 200 is bad, just cant find any info on it. dont like weapon r filters and no decent pictures to justify my 200$$
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Old 02-01-2008, 05:49 AM   #3
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There's more than one and the most common, you have already seen.

There's another one that is the entire unit in what seemed to be one piece.
Regardless. It didn't suck enough cold air.
The people I knew that had them. loved them.
Some of them raved on them.

Stick with the stocker set up and then build that airbox.
If you remove the plastic covers and get your face in that great void of space. You'll see that there is plenty of room to be utilized.
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Old 02-01-2008, 05:55 AM   #4
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Yes would love to make a box that helps channel the air from the whole that is alrdy present instead of sucking in engine bay heat.

Personally i do not know how to go about this..
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Old 02-01-2008, 08:38 AM   #5
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my current set up w/ lipp adapter and AEM dry flow filter

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Old 02-05-2008, 12:41 AM   #6
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Default CAI PVC Pipes

Thought I'd share my CAI pipe made from Home Depot PVC pipes...just 3" black pipe, a 60* bend and a 3" - > 2" adapter to fit to the throttle body with a rubber fitting and clamps. Works great, and I think it looks better in my dirty engine bay than an outstanding shiny chrome pipe! Filter is AEM dryflow 3x5"

You can hardly see it but I have a (poorly) fashioned shield to act as a condom around the filter. I made this out of cheap aluminum roofing. It seems to keep some of the heat out but as importantly is effective in blocking water from splashing up. It's attached with brackets made from the same material looped into the clamp.

Total cost including AEM filter was about $60.

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Old 02-05-2008, 02:25 AM   #7
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Thats nice and all but black doesn't cool down very well and metal cools more easily than plastic.

With that set up, your filter is still not in the cool spot.
And with it open without an airbox or being on the right side of the wall.
You have no way to control the air temp other than throttle up.

The stock intake is better than what is being shown here.

BUt I must say. I have done the same type of thing.
Never applied it but I built the model.
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