No harm in looking (with appropriate care to avoid introducing dirt into the engine) but cars are very very insensitive to restricted air filters.
A feedback-loop controlled car (which this almost certainly is) is very, very, very insensitive to a restricted air filter.
In extremis it''d loose power, but it shouldn't run rich because the engine management should prevent it.
This implies that this cause shouldn't result in the "fuel smell" symptom.
A clogged fuel filter could also restrict power, but it shouldn't result in a "fuel smell" unless back pressure from the blockage is causing an actual fuel leak.
If this was the case, it'd likely be constant rather than just on the uphill.
While these would both be cheap fixes, my money is on clutch slip, which unfortunately isn't, but you can test for it, as described above, before committing to the spend.
Something to check/jhave checked before replacement might be clutch adjustment.
While I believe most cars have hydraulic clutch control, which doesn't normally require adjustment, a couple of my smaller, cheaper cars (Renault 5, Daihatsu Skywing) at least have had cable actuated clutches which needed adjusted ocaisionally.
A blocked exhaust would also seem to be a possibility. On a non-cat car (which yours almost certainly isn't) this is often easy to fix, but also much less likely,
A cat equipped car would probably require a new catalytic converter.
Easiest (as in most easily interpreted) way to diagnose that is to remove your oxygen sensor, which "opens up" the exhaust, bypassing the exhaust restriction and restoring power.
Its supposed to be diagnosable with a vaccuum gauge too with experience. l couldn't make sense of the results when I tried it.
Edited by edlithgow on 22/02/2023 at 08:41
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