There is a PCV valve & hose on the top of my engine venting gases back into the intake. But I noticed there is another hose on the side of the engine valve cover connected directly to the intake with no PCV valve in-between. Why? What is it for?

Shouldn't this be "slightly above atmospheric pressure" from the mild ram-charging effect occuring in the intake plumbing? After all, this venting system is called "positive crankcase ventilation" for a reason. By positively charging the engine's innards, any combusion vapors are then purged throught the one-way PCV valve.quote:
Originally posted by Rick in PA:
...The other hose is between the throttle body and the air filter, so this hose has clean, filtered air at just slightly below atmospheric pressure in it...
I don't know about other cars, but I find it hard to believe that there's any ram-charging effect that survives the convoluted trip through my car's intake, resonator, and air filter. The hole that air enters the system through isn't even pointed forward.quote:
Originally posted by Ray H:
Shouldn't this be "slightly above atmospheric pressure" from the mild ram-charging effect occuring in the intake plumbing?
All that's required is that the pressure be positive compared to manifold pressure.quote:
After all, this venting system is called "positive crankcase ventilation" for a reason. By positively charging the engine's innards, any combusion vapors are then purged throught the one-way PCV valve.
quote:
Originally posted by Ken4:
So which way are the gases moving?
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Thanks... I'm getting really good at googlequote:
Originally posted by Ken4:
Thanks S2000! That article is very good.![]()