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I fail to see how the oil will be separated from the air stream as the gentlemen above pointed out.You have to force the oil mist/air through the mesh and the fresh/clean air back to the intake.
I like the idea, and the cost, but unless I am missing something, I do not see a lot of oil dropping out of the air stream here.
Let us know how it works, as I have an LS6 that would enjoy this
Steve
Changes in velocity. How does a shop vac manage to fill up with debris? High velocity in ..DEAD SPACE ..heavier particles drop out since there's no velocity to keep them in suspension ..they drop out ...clean(er) air exits at the same high velocity.
It's how stuff gets clarified. It's how spray dryers work. Dust collectors.
You can often just change the diameter and/or length of the hose. It's the same thing if you put too big a muffler or pipe on your exhaust. Make it big enough and it just goes still in the muffler and doesn't have enough velocity to exit out the tail pipe on its own.
The best way to do it, if possible, is to have it drain back to the valve cover. You can run two lines, the "IN' flow will balance out and you'll still get the mass in the bottom. You'll just have a static column of oil to one of the hoses (may be smaller). When the engine shuts off, it drains back. Maintenance free.
This can be done on either end.
Clean piece there, SteveC!
Just add another inlet hose to see what I'm talking about.