Regarding the temperature sensor.

.

.

Those cheap

"chips" to boost horsepower simply work by altering the resistance across the sensor slightly so the engine thinks it's running 1 degree cooler and increases power to suit.

With that in mind, the difference between the interior temperature of the engine bay and the actual temperature of the inlet air is often going to be pretty huge.

Personal experience bears this out.

My car was running

"okayish" but then, when I noticed somebody'd wedged the temp sensor underneath the airbox rather than actually sticking it into the hole provided for it, when I poked it back into the airbox, the car was noticeably quicker under acceleration.

FWIW, this isn't just a placebo effect.

I have one of those G-Tech performance gizmo's and it predicts my car is making 20BHP more in 4th-gear acceleration now than it was when the sensor was misplaced.

I suspect that's a little optimistic but I find acceleration is now

"sharp" where it was only

"smooth" before.

Only other thing is that you need to make sure the sensor is actually IN the air flow.

If you're talking about jamming it into the piping tee I'm thinking of, I'm not sure it'll be all the way into the air flow.

If it was me I'd be thinking about drilling a hole through the filter back plate and then fitting a suitable grommet and stuffing the sensor into there.
