I was also suggesting to protect the air DUCT, coming from the air box to the intake ...
My bad for failing to mention this.
Yes, anything and everything that can be done to not only inhale air from outside the engine bay,
but also to insulate separate and protect the entire intake from the airbox to the throttle body from heat does help.
Speaking of which, throttlebody coolant bypass!
Coolant has been running through the throttlebody since carburetion and throttlebody injection,
when fuel vapors could freeze on the throttlebody, effectively freezing the throttle itself stuck in one position.
Even though fuel is injected far further down each cylinder individually today,
coolant is still routed through the throttlebody so that any motor oil vapors condensed on its backside
won't be gummed up by being cold.
When one does the throttlebody coolant bypass, it's a GREAT time to clean its backside before reinstallation.
Vehicles that operate where it's winter-cold year round should NOT do the throttlebody coolant bypass.
Back when intake manifolds were made of metals, racers went so far as to ice them down between track passes.
It was considered rude to drip condensate on the track ...