This topic is about the most boring one that keeps coming up.
no matter wether you have a cone, panel or no filter at all, the temperature of the air is gonna be the same. Think about where the air goes before it gets to your Engine.
Through the TIP (that runs right past a 1000deg turbo), into that 1000deg turbo, then its cooled before entering the engine.
If you draw in air at 10deg, or air at 50deg, it'll make no real difference unless your intercooler isn;t up to the job
Not quite. The hot part of the turbo is the turbine, but the compressor compresses the air and runs considerably cooler (nowhere near the turbine operating temperature) - ever wonder why the two halves of a turbo are made of very different materials?
The air temperature after the compressor is maybe 100-150°C at most, with most of the heating generated by the compression process itself and not heat transfer from the turbo housing/impeller (residence time in the turbo is very short, after all) so the inlet air temperature does make a significant difference to the charge density before the intercooler. When the outside air temperature is, say, 10°C the underbonnet air could be 40-50°C or more...
There is also the additional issue of flow restriction. A larger-diameter intake into the standard airbox can reduce the pressure drop between the atmosphere and the interior of the airbox. The engine is not having to work as hard to suck air through the intake...
A cone filter, drawing in hot air from under the bonnet, would be a retrograde step for power, but would make more noise.
A cone filter kit with cold air feed would be better, but it's unusual to find one where the cone is completely fed with cold air only.
Most likely the best improvement would come from de-restricting the standard airbox, usually by fitting a larger cold air feed duct to it, either the PD160 intake snorkel (pricy for what it is) or else a larger than standard diameter home-made intake pipe (englarging the hole in the airbox to accept this). Something like this:
http://www.auto-performance.co.uk/index.php?cPath=160
Best to fit a bellmouth to the inlet end to smooth the airflow.
There's usually little or no benefit to fitting an aftermarket panel filter in the standard airbox, and some cause MAF problems due to the oil on the filter.
How many of the above have you tried? My cone filter under the bonnet doesnt lose me any power.
In fact anyone I know of running a TDi with big power, has a cone filter. Thats not to say the airbox can't cope, but using a cone certainly doesn;t lose you any power.