well wiki is written by anybody who cares too submit an article. the fact that it completely flies in the face of well established theories just says blatantly that its crap.
this whole thing where people have been saying that warm air=more throttle=less pumping losses etc...is just crap. if you have to crack the throttle more, its gonna use more fuel, theres no questioning that. as for it having any effect due to less pumping losses...id think that itd be more luck than anything that you may find the sweet spot in the rpm band where torque is at its peak and therefore less effort to make the whole shebang move.
this is totally in contradiction to the FACT that cooler air is more dense and therefore contains a higher partial pressure of oxygen, the only gas in air that is combustible obviously. most EFI engines are quite capable of compensating for any changes in air temp, and that wiki article in my eyes is completely contradictory of itself in the thinking of any petrol powered ICE. if you look at the cited references you'll see that its only particular to THROTTLE-LESS engines...IE diesels.
simply, for a petrol ICE, the less dense the intake air, the less oxygen to burn=less power. therefore you need to crack the throttle further to gain the same amount of forward momentum, thus increasing fuel consumption. this is a long established theory, and really, i dont see any justification to question it, particularly when you see manufacturers doing it...even F1 - the pinnacle of automotive engineering - as well as all other forms of motorsport, use a huge intake directly above the driver's head/or highest, cleanest point for induction.
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