33 Products
Intercooler Kit
Intercooler Kits & Piping for Powerstroke, Cummins & Duramax
A diesel intercooler kit helps improve the complete charge-air path between the turbocharger, intercooler, and intake system. On hard-working diesel trucks, heat soak, boost leaks, cracked pipes, loose boots, and aging factory components can all reduce airflow reliability under load. If your Powerstroke, Cummins, or Duramax truck feels weak while towing, shows high intake air temperatures, or struggles to hold boost, upgrading the intercooler system is a practical place to start.
This collection includes standalone diesel truck intercoolers, intercooler pipe kits, hot-side pipes, cold-side pipes, Y-Bridge cold-side upgrades, and selected full intercooler kit options. Not every product includes every component, so always review the individual product page for exact fitment and included parts.
SPELAB intercooler and piping upgrades are built for selected Ford Powerstroke, Dodge Ram Cummins, and GM/GMC Duramax diesel trucks. Whether you are replacing a worn factory intercooler, fixing a boost leak, or upgrading both the cooling core and charge-air piping, this page helps you choose the right path.
What Does This Intercooler Kit Collection Include?
The term “intercooler kit” can mean different things depending on the product. Some truck owners need the intercooler core, while others need piping, couplers, clamps, or a full charge-air system refresh.
| Product Type | What It Does | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Intercooler | Cools compressed air from the turbocharger before it enters the engine. | Heat soak, high intake air temperature, towing power fade, aging or damaged factory intercoolers. |
| Intercooler Pipe Kit | Replaces factory charge pipes, boots, and connection points between the turbo, intercooler, and intake side. | Boost leaks, cracked plastic pipes, boot blow-off, oil residue around couplers, weak factory charge pipes. |
| Hot-Side Intercooler Pipe | Carries compressed air from the turbocharger toward the intercooler. | Leaks near the turbo outlet, heat-damaged boots, high-boost use, towing applications. |
| Cold-Side Intercooler Pipe | Carries cooled compressed air from the intercooler toward the intake system. | Factory cold-side pipe failure, intake-side boost leaks, throttle response issues, underboost symptoms. |
| Y-Bridge / Intake-Side Pipe Upgrade | Improves the intake-side airflow path on selected Duramax or Cummins platforms. | Duramax LBZ/LMM cold-side upgrades, intake-side restriction reduction, full airflow path refresh. |
| Full Intercooler Kit | Combines an upgraded intercooler with matching piping, couplers, clamps, or related hardware when included. | Owners who want to upgrade the cooling core and the charge-air path together. |
Choose by Truck Platform
The right upgrade depends on your truck’s platform, year range, engine, and failure point. Start with your truck below, then decide whether you need an intercooler, pipe kit, hot-side pipe, cold-side pipe, or a more complete system upgrade.
Intercooler vs Intercooler Pipe Kit: Which One Do You Need?
If your main issue is high intake air temperature, heat soak, or towing power fade, start with the intercooler core. The intercooler is the heat exchanger that removes heat from compressed air before it reaches the engine.
If your main issue is a boost leak, hissing noise, underboost code, black smoke, oily residue around couplers, or a pipe that cracks or blows off under pressure, start with the intercooler pipe kit. The pipe kit helps seal and strengthen the path between the turbocharger, intercooler, and intake side of the engine.
If both the factory intercooler and factory pipes are aging, damaged, or restrictive, upgrading the intercooler and piping together can create a more complete charge-air system refresh for tow rigs and high-load diesel trucks.
Bar-and-Plate vs Tube-Fin Intercoolers
Many SPELAB diesel intercooler options are available in either bar-and-plate or tube-fin construction. Both styles can work well, but they serve different priorities.
Choose a bar-and-plate intercooler if:
- You tow heavy loads or drive long grades where heat soak becomes a problem.
- Your truck operates in high-heat, high-boost, or heavy-duty conditions.
- You want a rugged core with strong thermal capacity and pressure durability.
- You are upgrading an older Powerstroke, Cummins, or Duramax for work or towing reliability.
Choose a tube-fin intercooler if:
- Your truck is mostly used for daily driving, light towing, or general replacement.
- You want an all-aluminum upgrade with a lighter core design.
- You prefer good airflow through the cooling stack and a practical direct-fit replacement.
- You are refreshing a worn factory intercooler without building a heavy-duty tow setup.
Hot Side vs Cold Side Intercooler Pipe
Intercooler piping is usually divided into hot side and cold side. The hot side carries compressed air from the turbocharger toward the intercooler. The cold side carries cooled compressed air from the intercooler toward the intake system. Both sides must stay sealed under boost.
Choose a hot-side pipe if:
- You hear or see a leak near the turbo outlet side.
- The stock hot-side pipe, boot, or clamp is loose, cracked, heat-damaged, or oil-soaked.
- Your truck works under heavy load, high boost, towing, or repeated heat cycles.
- You are upgrading turbo-side airflow components and want a stronger connection.
Choose a cold-side pipe if:
- You notice oil residue, loose boots, or leaking connections between the intercooler and intake side.
- The truck feels lazy under throttle or loses boost after the intercooler.
- Your platform is known for weak factory cold-side plastic piping or coupler failure.
- Your Duramax setup needs a Y-Bridge or intake-side airflow upgrade.
Common Signs You Need an Intercooler or Pipe Upgrade
- Heat soak while towing: The truck pulls well at first, then feels weaker as charge-air temperatures rise.
- High intake air temperature: The factory intercooler may no longer cool compressed air effectively under load.
- Hissing or whooshing noise under boost: A cracked pipe, loose boot, or worn coupler may be leaking pressure.
- Black smoke under acceleration: Reduced airflow from a boost leak can cause poor combustion balance on diesel trucks.
- Oil residue around boots or clamps: A light oil film near a coupler can help reveal where pressurized air is escaping.
- Underboost-related diagnostic codes: Low boost pressure may point to leaks in the intercooler, piping, boots, clamps, or related charge-air components.
- Damaged fins or end tanks: Physical damage to the intercooler core can reduce cooling performance or cause leaks.
How to Build a Better Charge-Air System
A strong intercooler system is not just one part. The intercooler, pipes, hoses, clamps, intake bridge, and surrounding cooling components all affect how reliably compressed air reaches the engine. A new intercooler cannot fully solve airflow problems if the old boots, pipes, or clamps are still leaking.
For a more complete airflow and cooling refresh, some truck owners pair an intercooler or pipe kit with an air intake kit, intake manifold upgrade, radiator upgrade, or CCV reroute kit depending on the platform and build goal.
Fitment Notes Before Ordering
Before ordering, confirm your truck’s year, make, model, engine, and exact platform. Powerstroke, Cummins, and Duramax trucks can have different mounting points, intercooler dimensions, pipe routing, turbo outlet locations, intake bridge designs, and coupler sizes depending on the model year.
During installation, inspect the full charge-air path. Old clamps, softened boots, damaged couplers, or cracked factory pipes can still cause boost leaks even after installing a new intercooler or pipe kit. For high-mileage diesel trucks, refreshing the connection hardware is often just as important as upgrading the core.
Select Your Vehicle
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No reviewsNo reviewsRegular price From $399.00Regular price$955.00Sale price From $399.00Fitment:
Direct fit for 2011-2016 Chevrolet/GMC 6.6L Duramax LML
3.34-in bar-and-plate core is 34-percent thicker than factory
32.5-percent increase in core volume -
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2 reviews5.0 2 reviewsRegular price $654.00Regular price$1,080.00Sale price $654.00Fitment:
Direct fit for the 2013-2018 Dodge Ram 6.7L
3.34-in bar-and-plate core is 34-percent thicker than factory
32.5-percent increase in core volume -
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-12%
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-16%
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Let customers speak for us
from 5284 reviews
This is a really nice set up inexpensive but well-made. Make sure you use 1/4 inch drive and torque wrench, if you get the half socket 10mm and multi size extensions even better it’ll make getting those two back bolts easy
Makes truck breathe better and will definitely blow your y bridge out so do that while you’re in there looks great and fits up pretty good not perfect
Installed this SPELAB EGR Throttle Valve Delete on my 6.7 Cummins and the fitment was perfect. The kit was well made, installation was straightforward, and all the necessary parts were included. Everything lined up as it should and the truck runs great. Highly recommend for anyone looking for a quality replacement component.
I originally had the Banks Monster Ram intake with grid heater delete, and costed $1200. Recently I decided to give Spelab a try for their 3.5” pusher style intake with grid heater delete. Fraction of the price and performs the same. Only regret I have was my purchase of Banks.
Great product
Good product fast sipping was not that bad of a job
Nicely done ✅
Easy installation and everything fit perfectly. The kit is well-made, comes with the necessary components, and worked as expected. Shipping was fast and the quality exceeded my expectations. Highly recommend for anyone looking for a reliable EGR delete kit.
Very impressed with the quality of the cooler. Couldn’t find any instructions for the install. However, I was able to figure it out and plan to post a video for anyone else who may need help with the install.
Installed this on my 2015 6.7 Powerstroke and everything fit perfectly. Quality parts, straightforward install, and noticeable improvement in engine temps and reliability. Would definitely recommend this kit to anyone doing an EGR delete.
Installed on a 2019 Ram cab and chassis with no issues. Fitment was good, quality looks solid, and throttle response feels better. Definitely recommend this intake horn/grid heater upgrade.
Its worked perfectly so far. Make sure to buy one that is the correct size and that there is room for it. The motor is larger then I expected but made it work and ive used it everytime I drive
Perfect fit,excellent craftsmanship,great look,I would recommend this to others
I am very happy with my unpainted cast aluminum cover. I didn’t have any issues with fitment or hardware / sight glass installation. It looks great inside and out. I wish I would’ve taken a picture before reinstalling the spare tire.
2006 F250 (sterling 10.5)
Great solid parts. Install was relatively easy and the kit looks amazing. Going to buy another kit for my 24 Duramax soon.
Intercooler Kit FAQ
It depends on the specific product. Some intercooler kits include only the intercooler core, while others may include piping, couplers, clamps, brackets, or related hardware. Always check the product page for the exact included parts before ordering.
No. An intercooler is the cooling core that lowers compressed air temperature. An intercooler pipe kit replaces the charge pipes and connection points that move air between the turbocharger, intercooler, and intake system. Some builds need one; others benefit from both.
Upgrade the intercooler if your main problem is heat soak, high intake air temperature, damaged fins, leaking end tanks, or weak cooling performance under towing load. Upgrade the pipe kit if your main problem is boost leak, cracked pipe, loose boot, or coupler failure.
Choose bar-and-plate for heavy towing, high-heat use, repeated boost load, and durability. Choose tube-fin for daily driving, lighter replacement use, and a practical all-aluminum upgrade.
Most direct-fit intercooler or pipe replacements do not require tuning by themselves. However, trucks with larger turbos, custom tuning, modified intake routing, or major airflow changes should be evaluated as a complete system.
It can fix a boost leak if the leak comes from a cracked pipe, worn boot, loose clamp, or failed connection that the kit replaces. If the leak comes from the intercooler core, intake bridge, turbo housing, or another gasketed connection, that issue must be diagnosed separately.
For towing, prioritize stable cooling, sealed boost pressure, strong couplers, secure clamps, and correct fitment. A bar-and-plate intercooler paired with the correct intercooler pipe kit is often the strongest path for trucks that tow heavy loads or operate in hot climates.
Start with your truck platform and year range: Ford Powerstroke, Dodge Ram Cummins, or GM/GMC Duramax. Then identify your main issue: heat control, boost leak, cracked pipe, worn boots, or a full charge-air system refresh. Finally, check whether the product includes the intercooler, pipe kit, hot-side pipe, cold-side pipe, Y-Bridge kit, or complete hardware you need.
