Engine Covers

Engine Covers

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    Kuryakyn Marquis Choke Knob Cover Chrome - 2009

    Kuryakyn

    $39.99
    Does this engine cover fit my motorcycle?KUR Engine Dress Up Covers B fit 88-06 XL and 90-06 Big Twin models with stock carburetors, confirming precise fitment for your motorcycle.Is this engine cover easy to install?Install these engine covers as a...
    $39.99
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    AMS Performance 2020+ Toyota GR Supra Carbon Fiber Engine Cover - AMS.38.06.0001-1

    AMS

    $429.95
    What vehicles are compatible with the AMS Engine Covers?Confirm fitment for your specific vehicle prior to ordering to ensure proper integration with your AMS Engine Covers.Do I need professional installation for AMS Engine Covers?Professional...
    $429.95
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    Wehrli 01-10 GM 2500/3500 HD Lower Splash Shield Kit - Fine Texture Black - WCF100463-FTB

    Wehrli

    MSRP: $299.00
    $290.03
    Will this splash shield kit fit my 2023 Silverado 3500?Wehrli splash shield kits are designed as a bolt-on upgrade, always confirm specific vehicle fitment for optimal integration.What is the main benefit of installing this splash shield?This heavy gauge...
    MSRP: $299.00
    $290.03
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    Wehrli 11-19 GM Duramax 6.6L Lower Splash Shield Kit - Fine Texture Black - WCF100432-FTB

    Wehrli

    MSRP: $299.00
    $290.03
    Will this fit my 2015 Silverado 2500HD?Wehrli Splash Shield Kits are designed as bolt-on components, ensuring a precise fit for your 2015-2019 Chevrolet Silverado 2500 HD or 3500 HD.What are the main benefits of installing a splash shield kit?This heavy...
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    PERRIN 08-21 Subaru STI Boost Control Solenoid Cover - Hyper Pink - PSP-ENG-161HP

    Perrin Performance

    MSRP: $77.00
    $65.45
    Does the Perrin Boost Control Solenoid Cover fit my specific Subaru model and year?Perrin Performance recommends confirming precise fitment for your Subaru model and year before purchasing this engine cover.Is professional installation required for the...
    MSRP: $77.00
    $65.45
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    Turbo XS 15-16 Subaru WRX Billet Aluminum Vacuum Pump Cover - Red - W15-VPC-RED

    Turbo XS

    MSRP: $78.31
    $63.97
    What vehicles are compatible with this TXS Vacuum Pump Cover?Confirm exact vehicle fitment before purchase; this vacuum pump cover is designed for specific Subaru WRX models.Is professional installation required for this TXS Vacuum Pump...
    MSRP: $78.31
    $63.97
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    Turbo XS 15-16 Subaru WRX Billet Aluminum Vacuum Pump Cover - Black - W15-VPC-BLK

    Turbo XS

    MSRP: $78.31
    $71.21
    What is the purpose of a vacuum pump cover?Vacuum pump covers protect the sensitive vacuum pump mechanism from debris, ensuring optimal engine performance and longevity for your vehicle's engine covers.How do I know if this vacuum pump cover will fit my...
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    $71.21
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    Spectre SB Chevy Centerbolt Engine Dress Up Kit - 5428

    Spectre

    $106.99
    What vehicles are compatible with this engine dress-up kit?This Spectre engine dress-up kit is designed exclusively for 1987 to 1995 Chevy 305 and 350 engines with stock height valve covers.Do I need to be an expert mechanic to install this...
    $106.99
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    S&S Cycle Single Fire HI-4N Ignition Kit - 550-0502

    S&S Cycle

    $599.95
    What is the purpose of the S&S Cycle Ignition Kit?The S&S Cycle Ignition Kit optimizes ignition timing, delivering more responsive throttle and increased power output for your engine.How difficult is it to install the S&S Cycle Ignition Kit?Professional...
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    S&S Cycle HI-4N Ignition - 550-0501

    S&S Cycle

    $411.95
    How do I know if the SSC Ignition Kits fit my Harley Davidson?SSC Ignition Kits precisely fit 1977-1999 Harley-Davidson FLHR Road King models and twenty-eight others, ensuring a direct replacement installation.What is the installation process for the SSC...
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    Roush 2018-2022 Ford Mustang Roushcharged Engine Coil Covers for Ford Performance 2650 Supercharger - 422161

    Roush

    $357.03
    What year Ford Mustangs are compatible with these coil covers?Roush coil covers are designed to fit 2018 through 2022 Ford Mustang models, ensuring a precise installation for optimal engine bay aesthetics.How long will it take to install these coil...
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    Performance Machine Vision Cam Cover - Contrast Cut - 0177-2082M-BM

    Performance Machine

    $571.95
    Will these PFM Engine Covers fit my specific motorcycle model?PFM Engine Covers are precision-engineered for specific Harley-Davidson models; confirm exact fitment with your vehicle before purchase to ensure optimal integration.Are PFM Engine Covers easy...
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Engine covers — including valve covers, cam covers, and timing covers — are the first line of defense against oil contamination, heat soak, and debris intrusion in any performance or competition engine build. Motor Sport Mayhem stocks 129 in-stock engine cover options spanning entry gasket-replacement hardware through billet race-spec assemblies, with 161 brands represented and pricing from $1.19 to $11,495.95 to cover every build tier.

Our Top Picks for Engine Covers

Every product below was selected based on verified performance credentials, real-world fitment reliability, and proven value within its price segment.

ACL Race Series Main Bearings

ACL | $329.72

Tri-metal construction with controlled extra oil clearance spec delivers race-proven protection under sustained high-load operation.

  • Extra oil clearance tolerance engineered specifically for boosted and high-RPM competition applications

ACT Pilot Bearing

ACT | $17.00

A precision-fit pilot bearing that ensures correct input shaft alignment at the crankshaft interface, preventing vibration and premature wear.

  • Hardened steel construction tolerates the thrust loads generated by high-clamping-force performance clutch systems

AON Clutch Components

Action Clutch | $89.69

A universal race pedal stop that eliminates clutch pedal over-travel, delivering consistent engagement feel critical for track and drag racing launches.

  • Adjustable stop point allows fine-tuning of clutch engagement bite point without modifying the factory pedal box

AEM Wiring Connectors

AEM | $430.95

K-type thermocouple inputs rated for accurate temperature sensing across a wide thermal range, essential for monitoring exhaust gas and coolant temps in competition builds.

  • Four-pack format makes this ideal for multi-channel thermal monitoring across cylinder banks or intercooler inlet/outlet circuits

AER Wiring Kits

Aeromotive | $358.52

A 60-amp deluxe wiring kit engineered to deliver stable, uninterrupted power to high-demand fuel pumps without voltage drop under full-load conditions.

  • Pre-terminated, relay-based design eliminates field-wiring guesswork and prevents voltage sag that causes lean conditions at peak power

AFE PFADT Mount Set

aFe | $660.00

Polyurethane subframe mounts engineered to reduce chassis flex and sharpen steering response without introducing the harshness of full-solid mounts.

  • Durometer-tuned compound balances NVH control with the structural rigidity demanded by track and autocross applications

ALF Wiring Harness

Air Lift | $97.23

A second-generation wireless air management harness that integrates directly with Air Lift compressor systems for clean, reliable electronic height control.

  • Plug-and-play connector architecture eliminates splicing and reduces installation time significantly versus custom-wired alternatives

ABR CVT Belts

All Balls Racing | $200.40

A performance CVT drive belt with reinforced cord construction rated for the high-shock load cycles of aggressive off-road and desert running use.

  • Aramid fiber tension cords resist heat-related stretching that causes slip and power loss in sustained high-speed CVT operation

ARX Tail Light Converters

AlphaRex | $395.00

Full LED tail light assemblies with sequential turn signal capability that deliver faster activation response and dramatically reduced current draw versus incandescent OEM units.

  • Direct OEM-connector fitment eliminates the need for load resistors or harness modification on factory-compatible wiring systems

PA Alta Crank Pulley

Alta | $129.20

A lightened underdrive crank pulley that reduces parasitic accessory load and rotational inertia, freeing measurable power at the crank without internal engine modifications.

  • Billet aluminum construction provides the mass reduction needed for improved throttle response and rev rate on naturally aspirated and supercharged platforms alike

How to Choose the Right Engine Covers

The difference between a serviceable engine cover and a race-quality one comes down to four factors: material specification, sealing surface flatness, thermal resistance, and fastener retention integrity. Factory plastic or stamped steel covers warp under sustained heat cycles, lose clamping force at gasket interfaces, and in extreme cases crack under vibration loads that a performance engine produces routinely. When you're building for anything beyond mild street use, these failures translate directly into oil leaks, contamination, and lost laps.

Key Specifications

Material selection is the first decision. Cast aluminum offers the best balance of weight, thermal conductivity, and machinability for street and club-racing builds — it sheds heat faster than plastic and machines to a flat sealing surface that holds consistent torque without creep. Billet aluminum steps this up for all-out competition, offering tighter dimensional tolerances and the ability to integrate additional features like breather ports, baffling, or direct oil return provisions. For budget-conscious builds that still see occasional track use, quality OEM-replacement covers in factory materials are acceptable provided the gasket interface is inspected and the cover itself hasn't warped from a previous overheat event.

Sealing surface flatness is critical and frequently overlooked. A cover that's out of flat by more than 0.002 inches across its mating face will leak regardless of gasket quality or fastener torque. On any used cover, always check flatness with a precision straightedge before reuse — this is especially important on aluminum covers that have been overtorqued previously. The engine components you pair with a cover — particularly valve cover gaskets — should be matched to the cover material; silicone gaskets work better with aluminum, while cork-composite compounds suit cast iron applications.

Fastener pattern and thread engagement matter significantly under vibration. Competition covers should use coarse-thread fasteners with minimum six-thread engagement into a parent material — not into a repair insert unless it's a proper time-sert or keensert installation. Fine-thread fasteners in aluminum covers are acceptable for torque purposes but strip more easily if over-tightened during assembly. Always torque to spec with a calibrated tool; finger-tight plus a quarter-turn is a common field mistake that leads to pulled threads and persistent leaks.

Thermal considerations become important for covers that sit directly above exhaust ports or turbocharger hot-sides. In these positions, a cover with integrated heat shielding or an external thermal wrap solution reduces heat soak into the oil sitting above the valvetrain. Elevated oil temperatures above 270°F accelerate oxidation and viscosity breakdown — a problem that a correctly designed cover can partially mitigate by limiting radiant heat absorption. If your build runs a cooling system that's already working hard, reducing heat sources at every opportunity compounds the benefit.

Engine Cover Material and Application Reference Guide

Cover MaterialMax Continuous TempSealing Surface Flatness SpecRecommended Application
OEM Plastic / Composite250°F (121°C)±0.005 inStock street rebuild, daily driver, low-stress NA engines
Stamped Steel350°F (177°C)±0.003 inStreet performance, occasional track use, budget builds
Cast Aluminum450°F (232°C)±0.002 inStreet/strip, club racing, boosted street engines, endurance builds
Billet Aluminum (6061-T6)500°F (260°C)±0.001 inFull race, drag, time attack, sustained high-RPM competition
Magnesium Alloy400°F (204°C)±0.0015 inWeight-critical race builds, open-wheel, hillclimb
Carbon Fiber Composite300°F (149°C)±0.002 inAesthetic / cosmetic covers, low-heat-exposure locations only

Price Guide

Entry ($1.19–$130): This tier covers replacement hardware, gaskets, seals, fasteners, and basic OEM-spec covers that restore factory function after a leak or damage event. Ideal for daily drivers and stock rebuilds where the goal is reliability, not performance gain. Quality varies — stick to known brands and verify gasket material compatibility with your specific coolant and oil chemistry.

Mid-range ($130–$500): The performance sweet spot where most enthusiasts land. Cast aluminum covers with integrated baffling, improved breather systems, and better gasket interfaces populate this range. You're buying measurably better thermal management, longer seal life, and often a significant weight reduction over OEM pieces — all relevant for street-performance and weekend track builds. Brands like ACL, Cometic Gasket, and Gates anchor this segment with verified race-use pedigree.

Premium ($500–$11,495.95): Billet construction, custom-machined sealing surfaces, integrated oil return provisions, and full race certification occupy this tier. The cost is justified in sustained competition where a single oil leak or cover failure ends a race weekend — or destroys an engine worth multiples of the cover price. Builders running GSC Power Division or Brian Crower valve train components inside typically match them with covers engineered to the same tolerance standard.

Who Is This For?

Engine covers serve every performance tier from weekend street drivers to full-competition race builds — the usage data reflects a category that skews heavily toward serious performance applications.

Engine Performance — 8.5/10

This is the highest-scoring use case in the category, and it reflects how directly cover quality affects what happens inside the engine. A properly sealed, thermally managed cover contributes to stable oil temperature, clean crankcase ventilation, and consistent valvetrain lubrication — all of which translate to repeatable power output. Builders chasing maximum performance from their engine components treat the cover as an integral part of the top-end package, not an afterthought.

Racing Competition — 8.2/10

At 191 products scoring 8.2/10, competition use is a core application for this category. Race engines operate at sustained RPM, elevated oil temperatures, and under vibration loads that stress every sealing surface repeatedly. Cover fastener retention, gasket crush consistency, and material stability under thermal cycling are not theoretical concerns at this level — they are the difference between finishing and retiring. Many sanctioning bodies also mandate specific cover configurations for catch-can and PCV routing compliance.

Track / Autocross — 8.2/10

Tied with racing competition at 8.2/10 across 181 products, the track and autocross segment demands covers that handle the sustained lateral G-loads that slosh oil away from standard baffling in OEM designs. Covers with integrated oil-control baffles and correctly positioned breather ports prevent the oil starvation and blow-by events that plague stock covers under hard cornering. This is often the first top-end upgrade a track-day driver makes after experiencing oil consumption issues on circuit.

Drag Racing — 8.2/10

Drag racing scores equally high at 8.2/10 across 147 products, driven by the extreme cylinder pressure events and violent launch loads that stress every engine fastener simultaneously. Cover integrity under a hard launch is non-negotiable — a loose cover at the staging line becomes a blown gasket by the 60-foot mark. The forced induction builds common in drag racing also produce elevated crankcase pressure that demands covers with robust PCV and breather provisions to prevent seal failures.

Street Performance — 7.6/10

Street performance scores a solid 7.6/10 across the largest product pool at 196 units, reflecting wide applicability but also the reality that street builds tolerate more variation in cover spec than competition builds do. For street use, the primary concerns are oil leak prevention, aesthetic improvement over factory plastic covers, and correct PCV routing for emissions compliance. An upgraded cast aluminum cover on a street build delivers real benefits in thermal management and leak resistance without requiring the tolerance standards of a full race piece.

Trusted Engine Covers Brands We Carry

The brands that dominate this category have earned their position through measurable engineering standards, not marketing. ACL brings decades of OEM-supplier-grade bearing and sealing technology backed by documented clearance specifications used by professional engine builders worldwide. Cometic Gasket sets the standard for precision-cut multi-layer steel gaskets and cover sealing solutions, with MLS technology that maintains crush consistency through thousands of heat cycles. ARP fasteners are the default choice for any performance cover installation where fastener stretch and clamping force retention are engineered requirements — their aerospace-grade thread forms and documented torque specs eliminate the guesswork that causes failures. GSC Power Division and Brian Crower bring valvetrain-level engineering discipline to their engine top-end components, ensuring that covers and associated hardware are matched to the extreme demands of their camshaft and spring combinations. Wiseco and Manley Performance round out the premium tier, where every component in the combustion chamber envelope — including how it's sealed and covered — is treated as a system-level decision rather than an individual part choice.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are two-piece or three-piece engine covers better?

Two-piece covers are generally preferred for performance applications because they reduce the number of sealing interfaces — every joint is a potential leak point under sustained heat and vibration. Three-piece designs are common on OEM applications where manufacturing and serviceability requirements drive the design, but each additional seam requires its own gasket or sealant bead that must remain intact across all operating conditions. In a competition build where the engine is regularly serviced and re-torqued, a two-piece setup with a precision-machined mating surface is faster to service and more reliably sealed. The exception is when a three-piece design provides necessary access to internal components that would otherwise require full removal of a large two-piece assembly.

Are ACL or King bearings better for performance applications?

Both ACL and King Engine Bearings are legitimate race-quality products used by professional engine builders globally — the correct answer depends on your specific application and build target. ACL's Race Series uses a tri-metal construction with a specific controlled extra oil clearance option that makes it popular for high-RPM naturally aspirated and boosted builds where the builder wants to spec clearances precisely. King's performance line features their proprietary pMax Black coating and a performance copper-lead overlay that some builders prefer for high-load applications like large-displacement forced induction engines. In practice, either brand built to proper clearance specifications will outlast an uncoated OEM bearing in a performance application — the builder's clearance work matters more than the brand choice. Check your engine's specific clearance requirements and match the bearing's published clearance range to your target spec before selecting.

Are ACL race bearings coated, and does the coating matter?

ACL Race Series bearings use a polymer-coated overlay on their performance variants, which provides a measurable advantage during cold-start and oil film breakdown conditions. The coating acts as a sacrificial layer that tolerates momentary metal-to-metal contact — the kind that occurs at cold startup before full oil pressure is established, or during extreme load events where the hydrodynamic film momentarily collapses. This is particularly relevant on turbocharged engines where the bearing sees high loads immediately after startup before oil temperature stabilizes. The coating does not substitute for correct oil clearance and clean oil — it supplements them. For naturally aspirated street builds, uncoated ACL bearings built to proper clearances are entirely adequate; the coated variant earns its extra cost in forced induction and competition applications.

Are aftermarket head gaskets actually better than OEM?

For performance applications, quality aftermarket head gaskets from established manufacturers are typically superior to OEM units in their ability to seal elevated cylinder pressures, manage thermal cycling, and maintain consistent clamp load over time. Multi-layer steel construction — used by manufacturers like Cometic Gasket — provides more controlled crush characteristics and better recovery from thermal expansion cycles than the composite fiber gaskets common in OEM fitments. The critical variable is bore size match and fire ring thickness: an MLS gasket must be correctly sized to your bored block to prevent hot gas erosion at the combustion chamber edge. For a stock-displacement street rebuild, OEM gaskets are acceptable; once you're pushing cylinder pressure beyond stock limits through boost, high compression, or aggressive cam timing, a race-spec MLS gasket is the correct engineering choice. Always pair an aftermarket head gasket with a correctly resurfaced deck to the flatness specification the gasket manufacturer requires.

Are aftermarket belt tensioners worth using on performance builds?

Aftermarket belt tensioners are worth the investment on any build where the timing belt or accessory belt drives components critical to engine survival — which is most performance applications. OEM tensioners use spring-loaded designs with plastic pivot components that fatigue under the increased belt loads generated by performance accessories, underdrive pulleys, or engines running beyond their original RPM ceiling. Quality aftermarket tensioners typically use heavier-gauge springs, all-metal pivot arms, and improved bearing specifications that maintain correct belt tension across a wider operating range and for longer service intervals. On supercharged or high-compression builds where belt slip at the crank pulley causes timing errors or accessory failures, a tensioner that holds its preload consistently is not optional — it's part of a reliable build. Replace the tensioner any time you replace the belt; running a new belt on a fatigued tensioner is false economy.

Building something specific? Our performance specialists can help you select the right Engine Covers for your application — street, track, or full race build.