Yeah, I was referring to a coolant heater you could plug in to warm the engine a few hours before you need to start the car in the morning. An oil heater would be more for reducing engine wear at startup when it is very cold out.
I downloaded the calibration data from a ROM on a 1987 Dodge Daytona 4 cylinder (batch fired injectors) and looked at the values using Chem2 software. I noticed the computer automatically richens the A/F mixture when the coolant is cold. As the temperature of the coolant increases, the fuel enrichement decreases. At around 118 deg F the fuel enrichement levels off and does not decrease anymore. I imagine my Saturn has the same type of deal. Another interesting thing is the Daytona doesn't go into closed loop until the coolant reaches 66 deg F and a delay time of 20 seconds is reached (it does use a heated 02 sensor). I am half way to work by then (when the outside temp is around 30 deg F)!
I think if i had a longer commute to work, i would see less of a mileage improvement with the warm air intake (WAI). Since my commute is short my engine is not warmed up fully by the time I get to work. The warmer air probably helps vaporization while the intake and head are still cool. Once everything is warmed up, the WAI probably makes little difference in mileage. Keep in mind that my car uses sequential fuel injection, not a carburator, and I'm still seeing an improvement.
It really hasn't made a very noticeable decrease in performance during summer days, so I don't worry about having a valve to turn off the warm air and pull in cool air on hot days. I also hear no pinging and no noticeable spark retard (using a Scangauge II).