K&N 57-3041 cold air intake kit for the 1999-2002 Camaro and Firebird 3.8L V6
N

Next Level Performance

June 28, 2026 • 11 min read

If you drive a 1999–2002 Chevrolet Camaro or Pontiac Firebird with the 3.8L V6, the single easiest breathing upgrade is a high-flow cold air intake — and the K&N 57-3041 FIPK is the one kit purpose-built for your car. Below we cover exactly what it does for the 3800 Series II V6, the real horsepower numbers (K&N's own dyno figures, not hype), how to install it in an afternoon, and how to keep the washable filter from fouling your mass airflow sensor.

Our Verdict

The K&N 57-3041 FIPK is the best cold air intake for the 1999–2002 Camaro and Firebird 3.8L V6 — it is the only sealed, heat-shielded, direct-fit performance intake built for this exact engine.

Expect a deeper induction growl, easier breathing in the upper RPM band, and a washable filter that lasts the life of the car. At $399.26 with K&N's 10-Year/Million Mile Limited Warranty, it is the definitive bolt-on intake for the 3800 Series II V6 F-body.

Shop Our Top Pick →

Why the 3.8L V6 Camaro and Firebird Wants More Air

The fourth-generation Camaro and Firebird V6 runs the 3.8L (231 cu in) L36 “3800 Series II” — a naturally aspirated, overhead-valve pushrod V6 rated from the factory at 200 horsepower and 225 lb-ft of torque in 1999–2002 trim. It is a stout, torque-rich engine, but like most factory setups it breathes through a restrictive airbox and a paper element designed for quiet, not flow.

In 1999 GM revised the upper intake manifold to improve flow and added throttle-by-wire, and the air cleaner sits high in the engine bay above the radiator support. That layout leaves real airflow on the table at the filter and intake tube — which is exactly where the K&N 57-3041 goes to work. A freer-flowing intake lets the 3800 inhale a larger volume of air, and on a naturally aspirated engine more air means more usable power and crisper throttle response, particularly higher in the rev range.

At our Tampa, FL shop we tell 3.8L F-body owners the truth up front: this is a breathing-and-sound upgrade, not a power-adder. You are buying a permanent, reusable intake that wakes the engine up a few real horsepower and gives it the induction note the V6 always deserved — then pays you back over years because you never buy another air filter.

It also helps to understand what the 3800 is and is not. The L36 is a long-stroke, torque-first engine GM built for value and reliability, not for revving. It loves low-end and midrange grunt, and a smoother intake path simply lets it keep making that torque cleanly as airflow demand climbs. You will not turn a V6 Camaro into an LS1, but you will remove one of the few factory restrictions standing between the engine and the air it wants — and you will hear the difference every time you get on the throttle.

K&N 57-3041 FIPK performance air intake system for 1999-2002 Camaro Firebird 3.8L V6

The complete 57-3041 system replaces the factory airbox, tube and filter in one kit.

K&N 57-3041 FIPK — Our Top Pick for the 1999-2002 3.8L V6

The 57 Series FIPK (Fuel Injection Performance Kit) replaces the factory airbox, intake tube and paper filter with a free-flowing system engineered specifically for the 3.8L Camaro and Firebird. It pairs an oversized, oiled cotton-gauze cone filter with a carbon-fiber top, a rotationally-molded high-density polyethylene (HDPE) intake tube, and a custom heat shield that keeps the filter drawing cooler air instead of hot engine-bay air.

K&N 57-3041 FIPK cold air intake kit for 1999-2002 Camaro Firebird 3.8L V6

K&N Engineering

K&N 57-3041 Performance Intake Kit (99-02 Camaro/Firebird V6-3.8L)

$399.26
Part Number 57-3041 (FIPK)
Fitment 1999-2002 Camaro & Firebird 3.8L V6
Warranty 10-Year / Million Mile Limited
Shop Now at NLP Performance

Key Specifications

+12.31 HP
K&N dyno estimate (Firebird)
100K mi
Between filter cleanings
60-90 min
No-cut DIY install
1,000,000 mi
Limited warranty

What We Like

  • + Sealed, direct-fit design with a custom heat shield so the cone draws cooler air
  • + Washable, reusable cotton-gauze filter rated up to 100,000 miles between cleanings
  • + No-cut, hand-tool install on factory mounting points in about 60-90 minutes
  • + Backed by K&N's 10-Year/Million Mile Limited Warranty

Things to Consider

  • Gains on a naturally aspirated 3.8L V6 are modest — a few wheel horsepower, mostly up high
  • The reusable filter must be re-oiled correctly; over-oiling can foul the MAF sensor
  • Emissions/CARB legality varies by application — verify the EO number for your area
K&N 57-3041 carbon-fiber-top cone air filter installed behind the heat shield on a 3.8L F-body

The carbon-fiber-topped cone tucks behind the heat shield in the factory air-box space.

How Much Horsepower Does the K&N 57-3041 Add?

K&N's own chassis-dyno estimates for this kit are +6.79 hp at 5,066 RPM on the 3.8L Camaro and +12.31 hp at 4,826 RPM on the 3.8L Firebird. Those are crank/dyno estimates measured on K&N's equipment, so treat them as a best case — real-world wheel gains on a stock 3800 are usually a few horsepower, concentrated in the mid-to-upper RPM band where airflow restriction matters most.

Why does K&N quote a bigger number for the Firebird than the Camaro on the same engine? The figures come from separate per-application dyno pulls, and small differences in factory ducting and test conditions move the peak. The honest takeaway: this intake is worth real, repeatable airflow, but if you want the V6 to feel dramatically faster, pair it with a PCM tune and a freer exhaust. On its own, the 57-3041 is the foundation of that package — and the part you will never have to replace.

K&N 57-3041 oiled cotton-gauze cone filter with carbon-fiber top for Camaro Firebird 3.8L

The oversized cotton-gauze cone flows far more air than the factory paper element.

Cold Air Intake vs. Stock Airbox: What Actually Changes

A cold air intake is a free-flowing replacement for the factory airbox and filter, designed to feed the engine a larger volume of cooler, less-restricted air. The factory 3800 setup prioritizes silence and filtration with a small paper element and tight ducting. The 57-3041 swaps that for a large surface-area cotton-gauze cone on a smooth HDPE tube, so air enters straighter and faster.

The 57-3041 is not a bare under-hood cone — it is a sealed kit with a custom heat shield that mounts in the factory air-box area and blocks radiant engine-bay heat. That matters in Florida-style stop-and-go traffic, where an open filter can heat-soak and ingest hot air at idle. The shield keeps intake air temperatures closer to ambient so you actually keep the cold-air benefit. The most noticeable change for most owners is the sound: a deeper, throaty induction growl under throttle that the muffled stock box hides.

K&N 57-3041 molded HDPE intake tube and heat shield for 3800 Series II V6

The molded HDPE tube and heat shield replace the restrictive factory ducting.

How to Install the K&N 57-3041 on Your F-Body

Installing the 57-3041 is a no-cut, hand-tool job that takes about 60 to 90 minutes in your driveway — it bolts to factory mounting points, so no drilling or trimming is required. Here is the high-level sequence:

  1. Disconnect the negative battery terminal and let the engine cool fully.
  2. Loosen the clamp at the throttle body and unplug the mass airflow (MAF) and intake air temperature sensors.
  3. Remove the factory intake tube, airbox lid and lower airbox tray from the engine bay.
  4. Install the K&N heat shield in the factory air-box location, then fit the molded HDPE intake tube to the throttle body.
  5. Transfer the MAF sensor to the new tube per the instructions, reconnect the MAF and IAT connectors, and clamp the cone filter onto the tube.
  6. Double-check every clamp and connector for a tight seal, reconnect the battery, and start the engine to confirm there are no leaks.

Always follow the printed K&N instruction sheet for torque and sensor orientation specific to the 57-3041. A loose clamp or a misaligned MAF is the most common cause of a check-engine light after an intake install, so take your time on those two steps.

K&N 57-3041 FIPK intake components laid out for 1999-2002 Camaro Firebird V6 install

The complete 57-3041 kit bolts to factory points — no cutting required.

Keeping It Clean: Filter Maintenance and the MAF Caution

The 57-3041's cotton-gauze filter is washable and reusable, so the long-term cost of ownership is near zero — but it does need an occasional service. Under normal highway driving the filter can run up to 100,000 miles between cleanings; in dusty conditions, service it sooner. When it is time, a K&N Recharger kit cleans and re-oils the element in about 20 minutes plus dry time.

The one rule that protects your 3800: do not over-oil the filter, and never reinstall it before it is fully dry. On a mass-airflow car, excess filter oil reaching the MAF element can cause rough running and inaccurate readings. K&N's own lab testing shows properly serviced filters do not harm the sensor — the real-world problems come from rushing the job. Apply oil sparingly along the crown of each pleat, let it wick in, and wipe the MAF with sensor-safe cleaner if needed. Two kits make this foolproof, and both ship in stock from NLP Performance.

K&N Aerosol Oil Recharger Service Kit for cleaning and re-oiling a cotton-gauze air filter

K&N Engineering

K&N Aerosol Oil Recharger Service Kit

$20.25
Use Clean & re-oil cotton filters
Includes Aerosol filter oil + cleaner
Best For Fast, even re-oiling
Shop Now at NLP Performance
K&N Filter Cleaning Kit with Power Kleen and squeeze-bottle filter oil

The squeeze-bottle Filter Cleaning Kit is the budget way to service your cone.

Comparison: The 57-3041 Intake and Its Service Kits

Here is how the in-stock K&N parts for your 3.8L F-body stack up — the intake itself plus the two ways to keep its reusable filter flowing. Every part below is in stock and ships from our Tampa, FL warehouse.

Kit Best For What's Included Price
K&N 57-3041 FIPK IntakeTop Pick More airflow + induction growl Cone filter, HDPE tube, heat shield $399.26
K&N Aerosol Oil Recharger Kit Quick, even re-oiling Aerosol filter oil + cleaner $20.25
K&N Filter Cleaning Kit Full wash + re-oil service Power Kleen + squeeze oil bottle $9.59

For most 1999–2002 3.8L Camaro and Firebird owners, the answer is simple: the 57-3041 is the intake, and one of these two kits keeps it serviced for the life of the car. If you want a fast, mess-free re-oil, grab the aerosol Recharger; if you want the lowest-cost option and do not mind the squeeze bottle, the Filter Cleaning Kit does the same job for under $10. Either way, you are buying once and maintaining cheap — that is the long-game value of a washable K&N filter on a car you plan to keep.

K&N 57-3041 intake kit hardware and clamps for the 1999-2002 Camaro Firebird 3.8L V6

All mounting hardware and clamps are included — everything bolts to factory points.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a cold air intake add horsepower to a V6 Camaro?

Yes, but modestly. K&N estimates roughly +6.79 hp on the 3.8L Camaro and +12.31 hp on the 3.8L Firebird with the 57-3041, with most real-world wheel gains being a few horsepower plus a noticeably deeper intake growl. The biggest returns come when you pair the intake with a tune and exhaust.

How much horsepower does the K&N 57-3041 add?

K&N's per-application dyno estimates are about +6.79 hp at 5,066 RPM on the 3.8L Camaro and +12.31 hp at 4,826 RPM on the 3.8L Firebird. These are best-case figures measured on K&N's equipment, so plan for a few solid wheel horsepower on a stock 3800 Series II V6.

How often should you clean a K&N air filter?

A K&N cotton-gauze filter is serviced as needed and can run up to 100,000 highway miles between cleanings under normal conditions. In dusty environments, clean it sooner using a K&N Recharger or Filter Cleaning Kit, then let it fully dry before reinstalling.

Do K&N filters ruin MAF sensors?

No, when serviced correctly. K&N's lab testing and returned-sensor data show its filter oil does not cause mass airflow sensor failures. Real-world problems trace to over-oiling and reinstalling the filter before it dries, so apply oil sparingly and allow it to dry completely.

Is the K&N 57-3041 a true cold air intake or just an open filter?

It is a sealed cold-air kit. The oversized cone filter mounts in the factory air-box area behind a custom heat shield that blocks hot engine-bay air, so it keeps intake temperatures down rather than acting as a bare under-hood cone.

How long does it take to install a K&N FIPK on a Camaro or Firebird?

Plan on about 60 to 90 minutes. The 57-3041 is a no-cut install that uses factory mounting points and hand tools, so most DIY owners finish it in an afternoon without drilling or trimming.

Will a K&N intake void my factory warranty?

As a general rule under the U.S. Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, installing an aftermarket part does not automatically void your warranty — a manufacturer can only deny a claim if the part directly caused the failure. For an emissions check, confirm the CARB EO number for the 57-3041 application in your state.

Wake Up Your 3.8L Camaro or Firebird

Shop the K&N 57-3041 FIPK and thousands more performance intakes at NLP Performance.

Shop the Collection

Free shipping on select brands • Located in Tampa, FL

Air intakeBuyer's guideCamaroCold air intakeFirebirdK&nPerformance partsSource-product:k-n-98-02-camaro-firebird-v6-3-8l-performance-intake-kit

Leave a comment