pcv system
#1
pcv system
i recently noticed that the boot around the pcv valve is rotted completely along with the y on the back of the motor. i have everything to create a new system except i cant locate another boot for the pcv. Is there a part number from gm or one i can get at the autostore?
Thanks
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#3
TECH Veteran
iTrader: (14)
Theres a writeup on here but i cant seem to find it i did it on mine and basically used fuel hose from the auto parts store couple to a hose barb that went to a piece of 3/4" hose i stuck the pcv valve in the other end and then attached it to the intake with another small piece of hose been working great for a yr.
#7
TECH Senior Member
iTrader: (42)
Been running a LS6 Valley cover and a breather in the oil fill hole on the valve covers now for 6 years and aprox 170,000 miles with no problem...no sluge or crap in the engine and no oil in the intake...when ever I pull the valve covers it looks like new inside ... car now has 224,500 + miles on it...it is a daily driver racking up about 25K-30K miles a year .. I fail to see what you are talking about.
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#8
TECH Senior Member
iTrader: (42)
This car has spent a bunch of time up in yankee land in cold weather...if you have a bunch of crud in your valve covers you must be doing alot of real short trips..if you drive enough to get the engine up to its correct operating temperature and drive it more that a short distance you will not have a bunch of condensation in your engine that is a constant no matter what type of PCV or breather system the engine uses...
#11
TECH Fanatic
iTrader: (1)
The pcv valve allows the crankcase pressure to be directed back into the intake where it can be reburned which is more environmentally friendly.
The fact that you pull out combustion gases from the crankcase is more of a perk, the pcv system wasn't designed solely around that. And you could also make the case that since you are contanstly sucking air out of the crankcase you need a vent to allow air back into the crankcase, in doing so you're constantly supplying fresh air (oxygen) to the oil which actually helps oxidize it and that fresh air also constantly introduces moisture into the oil.
the coldest part of the engine is the inlet to the water pump, after the coolant has cooled in the radiator.
dude, the heads are one of the hottest places in the engine, that is why you see on sludge & varnish prone engines all that muck under the valve covers. It's also why the coolant temp sender is installed into the water passage in the head.
#13
TECH Senior Member
iTrader: (42)
Dude you are cluless. I have lived in northern climates like Wisconsin and Alaska. It is not a top secret on how condensation builds up in a internal combustion engine. If you dirve alot of short trips you will get build up. If you drive longer distances you will not. You need to learn this basic principal before you post up incorrect info on a subject.