Tonights Main Event K&N Cold Air Intakes vs AEM Cold Air Intakes
Posted: Thursday, April 19, 2007
by Andrew Bernhardt
AutoAnything
Sure, comparisons are a nice, dignified way to pit two things against each other to find a measured victor in a gentlemanly fashion. But, that’s no way to decide which performance parts are best for your ride. In this edition, we pit K&N Cold Air Intakes versus AEM Cold Air Intakes in a gritty steel cage match. Read on for the blow-by-blow account of the clash of the induction titans.
Welcome to the air intake battle royale, where we force K&N Intakes and AEM Intakes to fight to the death…or at least until we have a clear winner holding the title of “Best intake for your auto." At face value, there are some similarities between these two fighters—both pack incredible pipes with the testing and training an intake needs to be a champion. We suspect the subtle differences are where the fight will be won; expect neither to be knocked out but rather jabbed into a bloody, stumbling, slurred submission.
In the black, red and orange corner we have K&N, the taller, heavier, more established fighter of the two. Sure, they’ve been slugging it out with other contenders for more than 30 years, much like an aged and grizzled fighter like Evander Holyfield. But, unlike Holyfield, K&N is sharper than ever, still packs quite a wallop, has their ears intact, and nobody is begging them to quit for their own good. K&N’s advantage comes from not only being the undisputed champion intake, but also from being the brand that practically invented the sport.
AEM struts in as the challenger; a slimmer, faster, younger fighter sporting flashy red and yellow trunks. Buoyed by newer technology and plenty of support in the sport compact realm, AEM’s plan is to take the lumbering K&N with speed, quickness and quality punches. This challenger firmly believes they’re ushering in a new era of intake performance, design and maintenance.
The bell rings, and the two intake brands dance toward each other. They come together, and K&N lands a nice two-punch combination to the nose and jaw, thanks to their intake tubes. Their crosslink material tubes, available on the vaunted FIPK 57 Series and 63 Series Air Charger intakes, keep the incoming volumes of air much cooler than the metal tubes used with every AEM. Not to mention the price—crosslink plastic tubing helps a kit cost less. But, AEM relies on its smooth footwork to land a stinging gut shot, thanks to the dressy look of their pipes, which are slightly nicer in terms of engine compartment looks even when pitted against K&N’s 69 and 77 Series.
AEM also rallies to run K&N into the corner with Brute Force, their brawny truck and SUV intake that’s gaining street cred by the minute. But, K&N escapes damage by striking AEM with their 69 series—an unlikely point on the card for the veteran. Though AEM has the sport compact high ground, most of the 69 Series is able to be configured as a short ram intake or a cold air intake drawing from the wheel well. Then K&N drills AEM in the eye with filter technology, setting off suffocating swelling. K&N’s cotton-gauze with oil filtration system uses its time-tested formula and 1,000,000-mile warranty to land a big blow over AEM’s struggling bid to equal cotton-gauze performance with an oil-less filter.
Round and round they go, trading jabs and the occasional slug that re-engages the crowd to this clash of now-tiring titans. As the 12th and final round passes with many a fist thrown but few landed, the judges must go to the scorecard. Though AEM takes rounds judged on compact performance and looks under the hood, K&N wins the battle by decision with an extra 4hp on the dyno for the F-150 with a 5.4L V8, which happened to be the judges’ trucks. The cooler crosslink tube (which also costs less) helped put K&N over the top of AEM here, making it the current undisputed belt holder for intake performance. But, AEM will likely return soon with some new moves in its quest for the title.
When you need to pick a cold air intake vying for the title, go with a champion like the K&N Cold Air Intake, or a smart, up-and-coming contender like the AEM Cold Air Intake.
This Article has been viewed 3,250 times. (Not updated in real-time.)
Top-level comments on this article: (3 total)Tecnically well explained with easy language. Helped me to decide.
The air traveling in the tube moves so fast it does not get a transer of heat from the tube, so that is a myth. You need a lot of surface area (think intercooler) to transfer heat. What the judges didn't see was oil in the K&N FIlter clogging their Mass Air Flow Sensor, and accumulating more dirt that makes a sticky mess on the outside of the filter vs the AEM Dryflow (which flows better *and* traps more dirt than the oiled filter).Have you sent for and seen the MAFS CD regarding this issue.... This makes your "observation" outdated, unknowledgeable and lacking in research. All Indy race cars run K&N filters, To protect their million dollar investments. Oh, by the way, doesn't K&N OWN AEM??? Why?
-AEM filters have better filtration (especially of fine particles) but less flow-K&N Has better flow but less filtration (especially of fine particles)The problem is that fine particles can damage your engine worse than larger ones. I personally went with AEM; mainly because i got a I4 that doesn't require a whole lot of flow, especially since i replaced the stock filter box with a ram air. I also have heard that AEM gives better fuel economy than K&N but thats just what i heard, the stuff stated at the top has been proven in numerous test.
We want your comments! If you can read this, you don't have javascript enabled, so you can't use this comment system. Please enable javascript.