Expert Tips for Winterizing Your Aftermarket EFI System

 

As the temperature drops and the salt trucks begin their rounds, it’s time to move your classic from the street to the garage. While winterizing a carbureted engine is a familiar ritual, aftermarket EFI systems require a slightly different approach to ensure their sophisticated electronics and high-pressure plumbing remain in peak condition.

As a performance specialist, I’ve seen too many owners face clogged injectors or “ghost” electrical issues come April. Here is the expert-level checklist to winterize your EFI-equipped build the right way.

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Electrical Integrity: Seal and Inspect Your Sensors

Corrosion is a silent killer of EFI performance. Even in a climate-controlled garage, ambient humidity can lead to oxidized terminals and galvanic corrosion on pins and sockets. This buildup increases electrical resistance, resulting in erratic sensor signals, data “noise,” or a complete “no-start” condition in the spring.

Combat the Ethanol Threat

The biggest enemy of a parked vehicle isn’t the cold; it’s the fuel. Most gas station pump fuel contains up to 10% ethanol. Ethanol attracts moisture, leading to phase separation and the formation of a corrosive “glop” that can plug the tiny orifices of your fuel injectors.

Throttle Body & Sensor Care

Your aftermarket EFI system relies on clean air and precise sensor data. Residue left behind during the driving season can harden over winter.

Electrical Integrity: Seal the Connections

Corrosion is a silent killer of EFI performance. Even in a garage, humidity can lead to “green crusties” on pins and sockets.

Borla Induction: EFI Winter Storage “Must-Do” Checklist

Task Why it Matters
Seal ITB Air Horns Borla’s Individual Throttle Bodies are precision-machined. Use specialized covers or lint-free cloths to prevent dust, moisture, or pests from entering the intake tracts.
Lubricate Linkage Kits Precision linkage kits should be cleaned and lightly lubricated with a dry-film lubricant to prevent binding or surface oxidation during storage.
Exhaust/O2 Protection Seal tailpipes to prevent “chimney effect” moisture from reaching your wideband O2 sensors, which are critical for Borla’s self-tuning ECUs.
Fuel Rail & Line Check High-pressure EFI fuel systems operate at 45-60+ PSI. Inspect all fittings and soft lines for signs of “checking” or leaks; a minor leak under pressure is a major fire hazard.
TPS Calibration Check Before final shutdown, use your software to verify the TPS signal is smooth. This ensures your “learned” data is accurate before the ECU goes into hibernation.
Treat Ethanol Fuel Use a stabilizer to prevent phase separation in the tank, which can clog the fine internal filters of high-performance injectors.

Get Your Build Ready for Hibernation

Don’t let a small issue turn into a major headache next spring. If you noticed your AFR (Air/Fuel Ratio) drifting during those final fall cruises, now is the ideal time to swap out components while the car is already headed for the jack stands.

Ensure your system is sealed and secure by browsing our professional-grade EFI Components. From fresh sensors to high-pressure fuel filters, we have the hardware you need to ensure a flawless first start when the weather breaks.

Have questions about specific storage procedures for your setup? 

Our Support team is here to help you safeguard your performance.

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