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Hello! I am looking to increase the venting in my engine bay to allow for better airflow and cooling through my c5 corvette. So far the only way I’ve seen that you can add extra venting to the car is by adding hood louvers to allow the hot engine bay air to escape via the top of the car. However, call me a wimp lol!, I don’t want to necessarily cut up my hood and add vents to it. My question is has anyone had any success with cutting the dead end side vents on the c5 corvette into the engine bay to allow for better venting?
Hello! I am looking to increase the venting in my engine bay to allow for better airflow and cooling through my c5 corvette. So far the only way I’ve seen that you can add extra venting to the car is by adding hood louvers to allow the hot engine bay air to escape via the top of the car. However, call me a wimp lol!, I don’t want to necessarily cut up my hood and add vents to it. My question is has anyone had any success with cutting the dead end side vents on the c5 corvette into the engine bay to allow for better venting?
Why? Are you under the impression that the air under the hood is stagnant? What are your measured underhood temps driving your concern?
As tempting as it may be, do not just cut out your fender liners, there's 'stuff'' in there like your ECM that will get wrecked by the road debris and water.
As an addendum, if this is a street car, you absolutely do not need this or engine bay venting. The C5 is designed to run coolant temps in the 220-230F range, there's absolutely no reason to change that.
Last edited by Lowend; May 14, 2026 at 11:32 AM.
Reason: update links
My car had a Vararam CAI on it and the two fog light ports are used to feed that. However, I removed most of the components of the Vararam and all of that air is coming into my engine bay. I have a Trackspec hood vent but, even with that, my hood rapidly buldges on the freeway while at speed. So, there is absolutely such a thing as having too much air in the engine bay. I would check to see how air is entering the engine bay and if there are prudent ways to help eliminate it if that's something that is concerning you. For me, my plan is to block those two ports and do the best I can to channel the air specifically out of the hood vent using some well-placed aluminum ducting. Is it overkill for the street? You bet. But will it make me happy knowing that I'm properly controlling air through my engine bay? Yep. I'll need to get a proper front splitter at some juncture, too but, that's a conversation for another day.
There's no "dead end". That's a fable perpetuated by them that haven't looked closely. When you reach in the side vent you can feel a plastic sheet, but that sheet is actually loose and flops around a bit (only attached on the inboard side) and has space around it for air to move. You can see that by taking the wheelwell cover section at the rear of the front wheel. It is open to the engine bay down under your brake master cylinder where the udders hang (shine a flashlight down there and then look into your side vents) , and by the computer on the passenger side. Between the two of them and taking into account that there are no large openings to the bay at the front of the car, there is plenty of room for the air in there to be sucked out of the side vents by low air pressure of the slipstream. The better plan would be to vent the fog light bezels like a Z06 to force air into the front.... it should still have no problem venting out the side vents.
edit: that’s not working. What gives, a YouTube link copied and pasted. Weird.
anyway, we all have lights on our phones. Shine yours in the vent and look in under the wiper motor.
It looks like the copy/paste is being censored for whatever reason. Your best bet is to click on the "Share" option and use the link there. Those typically work just fine.
I would suggest removing the insert from behind the driver's side wheel well making the fender side cove vent truly functional, but do NOT remove the passenger side unit due to the location of the PCM and issues with water splash intrusion.
I would suggest removing the insert from behind the driver's side wheel well making the fender side cove vent truly functional, but do NOT remove the passenger side unit due to the location of the PCM and issues with water splash intrusion.
this seems like exactly what I was looking for. How would I gain access to the screws holding it in? Also would there really be a huge risk removing the passenger side to if the fender liner is still in?
St. Jude Donor '14-'15-'16-'17-'18-'19-'20-'21-'22-'23
Originally Posted by SattarC5
this seems like exactly what I was looking for. How would I gain access to the screws holding it in? Also would there really be a huge risk removing the passenger side to if the fender liner is still in?
this seems like exactly what I was looking for. How would I gain access to the screws holding it in? Also would there really be a huge risk removing the passenger side to if the fender liner is still in?
IMO no risk, other than dirt and debris which I think is the reason for the flappy piece, also cosmetic so when you look in the side vent, you don’t see the ugly empty cavern there. It’s just a big empty space in there.
Enter through the wheel well, there’s a panel that comes off with about 7 or 8 screws. You will see the divider and the empty space around it. there’s enough space around the flap to let enough air by to vent out of the side vent. Space is at least the same area as the side vent opening. Also at speed, the air over the body will create low pressure at the vent which will suck the air through naturally. I see no advantage removing the flap when the goal is engine bay air. If the goal is to evacuate the air in the wheel well to help brake cooling, that’s another matter.
While you’re in there, clean your udders, they’re right there. They drip into the big open space there and the water runs out between the bottom plastic cover panels.
Last edited by Gorn Captain; May 16, 2026 at 02:34 PM.