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The secondary air injection (SAI) system pumps fresh air into the exhaust stream during cold starts, accelerating catalytic converter light-off and reducing hydrocarbon and CO emissions. The system includes the pump itself, check valves that prevent exhaust backflow, control and shut-off valves, connecting pipes, hoses, and the relay that triggers pump operation. Most failures trace back to the pump motor burning out, check valves clogging with carbon, or hoses cracking and collapsing — all common after 80,000–120,000 miles, though cold climates and short-trip driving accelerate wear. A failed SAI system almost always triggers a P0410–P0418 series code and will cause an emissions test failure. When sourcing parts, OEM pumps (Bosch, Pierburg, and Dorman are common OE suppliers depending on make) are the safest choice for longevity; if going aftermarket, verify the flow rate (CFM) and mounting configuration match your application exactly, as pumps vary significantly across model years even within the same platform.
Signs you need replacement
- Check engine light with a P0410–P0418 code — these codes point directly to SAI system faults: P0410 is a general air injection malfunction, while P0411–P0418 narrow it to specific circuits or banks. Don't clear the code without diagnosing the root cause.
- Loud whirring or rattling noise on cold startup — the SAI pump runs for 30–90 seconds after a cold start. A pump with worn bearings or a failing motor will produce a grinding or high-pitched whine during this window, then go quiet as the system shuts off.
- Failed emissions or smog inspection — a non-functional SAI system causes elevated HC and CO readings at cold-start, which will fail a tailpipe test, or trip a readiness monitor failure on an OBD-II plug-in test.
- Collapsed or cracked SAI hoses — hoses that have hardened, split, or collapsed internally allow air to bypass the system or introduce unmetered air into the exhaust, causing both codes and rough cold-start behavior.
- Check valve failure causing exhaust smell under the hood — a stuck-open or corroded check valve lets exhaust gases flow backward into the pump and hoses. You may notice a sulfur or burnt exhaust odor near the engine bay during cold starts.
Frequently asked questions
- Is there a set replacement interval for secondary air injection pumps? There's no scheduled maintenance interval — SAI pumps are replace-on-failure components. In practice, they commonly fail between 80,000 and 150,000 miles, with earlier failures on vehicles that accumulate frequent short trips, since the pump runs hardest during cold starts and never fully cycles down on brief drives.
- Are aftermarket SAI pumps reliable, or should I stick with OEM? OEM or OEM-equivalent brands (Bosch, Pierburg, Dorman OE Solutions) are strongly preferred for pumps and check valves. Generic aftermarket pumps have a notoriously high failure rate — some fail within 20,000 miles. For pipes, hoses, and relays, quality aftermarket parts are generally fine as long as fitment specs match your year, make, and model exactly.
- What else should I replace at the same time as the SAI pump? Replace the check valves and inspect all hoses whenever you swap the pump — a failed pump often damages check valves from backpressure, and collapsed hoses are frequently the root cause of pump burnout. Doing all three at once avoids a repeat job. Expect parts costs of $150–$400 for the pump plus $20–$80 for valves and hoses, depending on make.














































