+1 Keith Calver's article about air filters and drilling the box. And an eye-opening comparison between airbox and cone. Plus, a cone will give you a shedload more intake noise than a drilled standard box with K&N filter in it. I've tried both - the noise difference is massive.
FWIW, when I had my car set up on a rolling road, they first tuned it without any filter (for ease of access). Then they fitted the filter (K&N in a standard but drilled airbox) to fine-tune. It made minimal difference to the mixture. We never tried it with a paper filter, though.
Also, if you're heading to a rolling road, first ask what needles they've got for your HIF38. Fewer people rock up for a tune with a HIF38 than with a HIF44. Stands to reason... people bolt on a HIF44 in expectation of getting more horses. (Again, Calver offers thoughts on this.) So I found the dyno people had shedloads of HIF44 needles. But not nearly as big a selection for my HIF38.
by the way, the older style box (TAM something, I think?) which I have will fit onto a HIF38 and goes on/off using just the one rear wing-bolt. (The front wing-bolt replaced with a permanent bolt which holds the lid/filter/case permanently together.) I shortened the stud in the elbow, and now the complete airbox can be fitted or taken out while assembled, using the one wing-nut. Can't really ask for easier access than that. I chopped off the intake pipe flush to the box, and drilled the front of it per Calver. OK, so I maybe lose a horse because I'm sucking warm air instead of cold... but I'm happy with the compromise between complexity/bulk and function.
Edited by alpder, 20 May 2024 - 01:15 PM.