excesive smoke from pvc
i just noticed when you take the hose out of the can it blows heavy smelly
smoke. if i am at a traffic light you will see smoke coming from the can.
any help thanxs
If you have a huge cam with a pcv to catch-can, there may not be enough vacuum a idle to maintain negative crank case pressure, thus the smoke.
If you have a huge cam with a pcv to catch-can, there may not be enough vacuum a idle to maintain negative crank case pressure, thus the smoke.
but it is constant there is no water in the oil .it did backfire on the dyno
but the power was the same on the next pull
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"blowby" taken from wiki.
During normal operation, a small amount of unburned fuel and exhaust gases escape around the piston rings and enter the crankcase, referred to as "blow-by". [6] If these gases remained in the crankcase and condensed, the oil would become more diluted over time, decreasing its ability to lubricate. Condensed water would also cause parts of the engine to rust. [7] To counter this, a crankcase ventilation system exists to draw fresh air in from the air filter and expel the gases out the PCV valve into the intake manifold. In a non-turbo engine, the intake manifold is at a lower pressure than the crankcase, providing the suction to keep the ventilation system going.
here is something to help explain what PCV is and what it is meant to do http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCV_valve
can you get us a pic of your engine bay?
here is a pic of the breather in the oil fill cap:

here is a pic of how you shoudl have the line running from the front of the cover from the factory.

I illustrate the air flow direction with arrows the green line is air being drawn (sucked) out of the motor the blue is fresh air being sucked into the motor. Important note the port on the throttle body is simply a bypass hole that lets air enter the front of it and exit on the passenger side. The reason for air having to pass thru the throttle body is because it gets filtered thru the stock airbox thats in front of it and the MAF can meter it. After it exits the throttle body it enters the front port on the passenger valve cover this portion in blue represents the "open hole" portion of the hypothetical scenario I started this post with above. The green line represents the Shop Vachose and the intake manifold itself is the vaccume.
Now you can cap off the throttle body like you did thats fine thus eliminating the blue line but now the vaccume has no source to pull in fresh air as I would think you capped the front valve cover port as well. You need a new hole for fresh air to be pulled in from I personally put a breather in my oilcap. Now air gets drawn in thru that and this fresh air does need to be filtered as it will go thru the motor and eventually into the cylinders.
The green lines air after coming out of the motor is very hot and contains oil vapors/mist. This is where the catch can comes into the picture. The catch can is inserted into the green run and acts like a filter in it's own right removing the oil that is in that hot air and collecting it before it goes in the intake manifold to be reburned. The actual reason for the PCV is to remove the blowby gasses from the crank case. A small amount of the engine intake charge escapes around the pistons and slips into the crankcase below it. These build up and pressurize the crankcase if they are trapped like in your case. When you remove the can hose you are providing a way for it to escape and you are seeing this with the smoke. I hope this helps you out a lil bit and anybody feel free to add anything I overlooked or may be misleading on. I'm far from an expert on this and did not really have a grasp on this until recently myself.


