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Specific vehicles are targeted to specific audiences and the Nissan Maxima is no different. There are many family oriented drivers out there that appreciate what the Maxima has to offer. The sporty handling and spacious interior complement each other quite well. When a new born is on the way many sacrifices must be made, but a vehicle with considerable power is not one of them. There is no need to commit to a minivan when the 2008 Nissan Maxima 3.5L functions as a suitable baby mobile and provides the desired horsepower.
K&N Air Intake System for 2004-2006 Nissan Altima 3.5L, and 2004-2008 Nissan Maxima 3.5L
57-6015 Air Intake Installed in Nissan Maxima
If your daily driver is used to cart the kids off to school before work and act as the transport for a night out on the town, you may want to make some minor upgrades such as sleek wheels, or even a few engine modifications. Let's face it- a few extra horsepower wouldn't hurt, right?
Well in that case, check out the K&N air intake system part number 57-6015. The 57-6015 air intake fits several Nissan Maxima and Nissan Altima models with the 3.5 liter engine. See the list below for details. A set of dyno runs showed an average estimated gain of 7 horsepower with the K&N intake installed. This could offer the extra performance to give you piece of mind when you need to have a private getaway. The key to truly enjoying your vehicle is to reveal the true potential it holds.
This K&N air intake comes equipped with a washable and reusable K&N high flow air filter, a custom designed roto-molded intake pipe, heat shield, and a hardware pack that includes detailed installation instructions. The average installation time for this kit is about 90 minutes and can be done with simple hand tools.
K&N air intakes add lasting power and performance while providing outstanding engine protection. The components used in air intake number 57-6015 are made for the utmost quality and come backed by the K&N Million Mile Limited Warranty. Every K&N air intake system is tested on their respective vehicles with safety in mind, so there is no need to worry about voiding your vehicle's factory warranty.
Brett Moffitt leads the pack in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Richmond International Raceway
Brett Moffitt edged Chase Elliott on the last lap of a green-white-checkered flag finish and won his first race of the season in the NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race at Richmond International Raceway in Virginia. Moffitt, in his fourth year in the K&N Pro Series East, crossed the finish line 0.011 seconds ahead of Elliott, who was making only the 15th start of his K&N Pro Series East career.
Brett Moffitt in victory lane after winning his first K&N Pro Series East race of the season.
"We were really good all race long," said Moffitt, who won the eighth K&N Pro Series East race of his career. "We were struggling right off the truck, but these guys really pulled together and worked hard all day. They gave me the car that we needed to win. Chase Elliott and Corey LaJoie were both really fast at the end, and Ryan Gifford through the middle of the race. They really gave me a run for my money, but we were able to hold on out front and bring home the money."
Moffitt won the pole and led a race-high 92 laps. He was out front for the first 71 laps of the Blue Ox 100 before Ryan Gifford took the lead. Gifford and Moffitt swapped the lead over the next 13 laps before Moffitt took over on lap 84. Moffitt was out front for the remaining 19 laps of the race, including the final two on the green-white-checkered flag finish.
Elliott and Moffitt collided on the last lap as the two drivers battled for the lead all the way around the track.
"He is a wheel man," Moffitt said about Elliott. "He can drive the wheels off of it. Anyone up there, running up there, can and deserves to win. I was worried like crazy. We had been sitting out front all race long. We got passed a couple times by Gifford and once by LaJoie. It's always nerve-wracking when you lead a whole race."
Elliott, the son of NASCAR Cup champion Bill Elliott, posted the best finish of his young K&N Pro Series East career and took over the lead in the East Series standings.
"I really wanted that one," Elliott said. "If we can keep running like this, I think we will get one."
Elliott is four points ahead of teammate Ben Kennedy in the K&N Pro Series East Series standings after three races. It was Elliott's third top-10 and first top-five finish of the season. He said the last-lap battle with Moffitt might have come too late to make a difference.
"It was beyond time to go and the chance was now or never," Elliott said. "Obviously I would have liked to have the bottom. When I got the lead from Brett down here in three, I guess Corey, he followed me through. He gave me a nice bump down there in one and two. We did some awesome short track racing."
LaJoie, son of two-time NASCAR Nationwide Series champion Randy LaJoie, finished third in the K&N Pro Series East race at Richmond for the second year in a row. He is third in the East Series standings, nine points behind Elliott.
"Everything looked like it was falling our way," LaJoie said. "That last run with 10 to go or something, the 2 car (Gifford) spun out, or I don't know what happened. It kept going green and I had Brett passed. The caution came out and set up that green-white-checkered, which I didn't want to see."
The race also featured Travis Pastrana and Ryan Blaney. Both drivers made their NASCAR Nationwide Series debuts at Richmond on Friday night. Blaney was 22nd and Pastrana followed in 23rd in the K&N Pro Series East race.
Jesse Little became the youngest driver, at 15 years, 11 days, to start a K&N Pro Series race. He qualified 15th and finished 11th.
The next NASCAR K&N Pro Series East race is at Iowa Speedway on May 19.
Florian "Superflo" Wedenig put on a show of his off-road talents by battling from the back of the pack, pulling out a seventh and fifth place finish.
The International Austrian Supermoto State Championship got underway last weekend in Burgenland, Austria and for K&N's Team Honda Austria, weather proved to be the most challenging opponent. What makes Supermoto racing so compelling for the growing legions of fans is that it combines motocross and road racing skills into one exciting event, and at these opening rounds those skills were put to a thorough test.
Andi Rothbauer overcame the extreme weather conditions in Burgenland finishing both race one and two with a solid fifth place.
Team Honda Austria is one of the premier international Supermoto teams with International Supermoto stars, Florian Wedenig and Andi Rothbauer as team riders. Florian "Superflo" Wedenig competes in Class S Open, and Andi Rothbauer battles in the elite Class S1, and both riders overcame some intense challenges presented by severe weather. Heavy rain and extreme hourly weather changes presented problems not only with track conditions, but also with finding the correct bike set-up.
The two Team Honda Austria riders had the benefit of using two separate bikes, one for rainy and one for dry conditions which allowed them to use every single practice minute. The weather in fact became such an issue that for the first time in the Austrian Supermoto history, a decision was made by the organizers to keep a portion of the off-road section open so that races wouldn't be run only on the tarmac.
"This was a correct decision," commented Rothbauer, "they did a perfect job on preparing the off-road section, but during the day this was something that really split the Supermoto riders. Like myself, I have no off-road background such as motocross, so these muddy, slippery conditions were very tricky. Also, we did not get to practice on the off-road section on Saturday because it was closed during free practice, which did make for really exciting racing."
On Sunday during the Class S1 warm-up laps Rothbauer realized that the weather was creating problems for his tear-off goggles, signaling that he would be experiencing problems during the race. In the first race Rothbauer got off to a good start securing third coming out of the first corner, and that's when the trouble with his vision started and he fell back to fifth. Rothbauer was able to stay close with the riders in front of him to lock up a solid fifth place finish.
In the second race Rothbauer and his perfectly prepared Honda CRF450R got off to another strong start, yet with 20 other riders all cramming into the first turn seemly at the same time, he was again pushed into fifth place. Rothbauer fought through the brutally slippery conditions, pushing the riders in front of him the entire way and finished with another strong fifth place.
In Class S Open Wedenig had his chance to highlight some of the motocross skills he brought with him to the team. Wedenig got the hole-shot in race one, but the slippery conditions proved too much and he went down, dropping him back to 15th place. Wedenig immediately got things righted and for the next 20 minutes he put on a show by passing one rider after another until he finished 7th overall.
The second race started off nearly perfect again for Wedenig, until a rider in front of him crashed taking him down as well. This time Wedenig found himself back in 13th position, and once again the exciting chase was on. Wedenig once more displayed his off-road prowess as he battled all the way up into a fifth place finish.
After the opening rounds Team Honda Austria Press Coordinator Claudia Rothbauer remarked, "Conditions were very tricky, but it was the same for everybody. This year we will have seven events with 14 races overall, so it was very important for us to keep the risk to a minimum. But, now we definitely know that our Honda CRF450R's very competitive overall. We didn't make the podium this time, but we proved we are capable of getting there real soon."
Overall Yann Cancade and the entire team were pleased with their season debut.
Circuit de Ledenon, or Ledenon Raceway, is by far one of the most winding, hilliest, and most technical circuits in all of France. It's an incredibly challenging course demanding full attention at all times and averages roughly 38 gear changes per lap. It is also the only circuit in France that runs clockwise. It was here that the French Promosport Cup opened their 2012 season last weekend, and making the course even more challenging was the constant down pouring of rain and unnerving gusts of powerful wind.
French Team 3ART-Yam74 had a strong opening race at Circuit de Ledenon.
Team 3ART is a creative designation referring to the three "A's" in Yamaha, with the "R" representing "Racing" and "T" for team. Two of the team's accomplished riders, Mathieu Charpin and Yann Cancade, overcame more than just bad weather to post points and open strong at Ledenon.
"The Yamaha has a lower level of power in regards to the others bikes," said team spokesperson Marc Lamure, "and nevertheless we have to show that it's possible to obtain some good results with it."
Despite racing on bikes they feel are unpowered compared to the other brands, Team 3ART feels they can make up for it with riding skills.
This is precisely what the K&N sponsored team did, on Sunday with unsettling crosswinds standing riders up or blowing them over, Mathieu managed to find his rhythm lap after lap putting together an excellent race. Despite having less power, Mathieu confirmed the potential of the Yamaha R1 by finishing in a very strong 5th place overall, collecting 12 points towards the overall standings.
Although showing moments of brilliance, Yann faced some additional race challenges, as he went down early on the rain slink track while braking hard setting up for a turn during qualifing. Yann started at the very back of the pack, yet moved past 20 riders to finish 25th. "Our goal is to be in the top-5 and to be competitive for the year long battle with the other brand bikes," added Lamure."
The next race for Team 3ART-Yam74 is Rendez-vous at Croix-en Ternois, on the 12th and 13th of May.
Randall Lawson and his Equipe Alpine Jaronn team are fire-up for the 2012 season.
It was a long tough winter for the Netherlands' Randall Lawson and his Equipe Alpine Jaronn team. Lawson competes in the hugely popular Dutch Youngtimer Touring Car Challenge Series; it's a series for cars from the 1970's and 1990's. In 2009 the team made the decision to race a Renault Alpine A310 V6, which was not intended as a circuit racer, but rather as a rally car. "We took up the challenge and created a circuit winner," commented Lawson after winning the 2009 Championship. In 2011 Lawson again won the Division II Championship and at the time he remarked "It's nice to have that trophy, but it would be more interesting to also get a podium in the overall standings of the Championship."
With the 50 extra horsepower, Lawson feels he now has an even better shot at beating the big guns.
Although Lawson has been successful in winning division championships running up against cars decades younger and with an average of 120hp, he clearly wants his share of an overall title. At the end of 2011 when we last spoke with Lawson he said, "For 2012 we already have a new engine ready with more horsepower. Next season is going to be interesting; maybe I can win the overall championship with it. We have a lot of work this winter to test and prepare the car for a new battle though. With K&N's help over here in Holland, we are going to make a special air-box for it. This is not going to be so easy, because we don't have a lot of room between the inlets of the Kugelfischer injection system and the rear bonnet of the car. But problems are there to be solved, and with the technicians of K&N, I think it's going to be something we will have no problem managing. That is one of the best parts of having fun with racing."
Lawson designed and built a "special box" to fit above the inlets which allows it to house a standard K&N air filter.
The long hard winter's effort has paid off for Lawson and his team, as the Group 4 Alpine A310 got a new engine with the experimental Kugelfischer injection from the seventies. "We found the parts for the Kugelfischer pump and throttle from a PRV engine in Germany," said Lawson. "Only three were ever made so it was hard to find. We worked all winter and built a complete new V6 around it from engine parts we still had."
The Alpine A310 is using the still experimental Kugelfischer injection from the seventies for the first time this season.
Renault experimented with the same system for their 1978 A310 Le Mans racecar effort, but then made the decision to switch back to Weber carburetors before the actual racing started, so the Kugelfischer system was never race tested. Admittedly the first test with the new engine in the beginning of the year didn't go well. But, after a lot of work by engine builder Griemelink, everything fell in place at the first two races at Historic Hockenheim event held on April 13th to 15th.
"We didn't know what to expect," Lawson explains. "It was all again last minute work. Thanks to K&N and a lot of other sponsors who also worked directly with the team to get everything ready in time, we managed it. When I got out of the pits on Friday morning for free practice, I knew immediately that everything would be okay. The engine is a real beauty, the extra 50 bhp is a dream come true. Of course we now have to work on a lot of other small things to make the car even better."
The Equipe Alpine Jaronn team finished 5th place overall in the first race and 3rd in the second at Historic Hockenheim event.
Road handling is still an issue and also the front brakes are now too small to handle the extra power, yet Lawson's skills were enough to earn him a solid 5th place overall in the first race and 3rd in the second. "I'm walking with a smile on my face that will stay there a long, yes a long time," exclaimed Lawson. "This is what we needed as a team after all the hard work this winter. 2012 is going to be a very great season in the Company Cloud Youngtimer Touring Car Challenge."
The next race for Lawson and his Equipe Alpine Jaronn team is May 18th and 19th at Zandvoort racetrack the Netherlands. "We will fit new, bigger brakes on the car and make the handling better by adding additional damperners on the front suspension," adds Lawson. "We will definitely be ready."