Originally Posted By: zray
Originally Posted By: Shannow
Originally Posted By: zray
There won't be much oil or anything else being sucked out of the crankcase during the situation described by the OP. WHY ? Because the PCV system depends on engine vacuum to do sucking. And there isn't much engine vacuum at any rpm when the throttle is wide open. Put a manifold vacuum gauge on the car and you will see little to no vacuum when the throttle is open wide at any rpm.
. That's why race cars just an exhaust crankcase evacuation system and not a traditional PCV system, the exhaust driven system works all the time, not just when there is a high engine vacuum.
Z
PCV closes on high vacuum to limit the flow...at no vacuum, it is wide open, and crankcase pressure pushes the blowby into the manifold, just like the old walking stick breathers used to do.
Correct, but those old vent tube breathers were notoriously ineffective at letting the crankcase do the "push". H ha. I should know, I ran one on my 289 HiPo for years recently. The sound you hear is me coughing.
And a PCV system without the vacuum pulling the crankcase clean is just as bad.(ineffective).the orafice of the PCV is designed for a vacuum, the pressurized crankcase is not goiing to be doing any amount of effect venting without a vacuum pulling it. Proof: check out those leaking valve cover gaskets and crankcase seals after a hard run around the track or highway. That's were the excess crankcase pressure is going, not much in comparison is making it thru the PCV. The very same (unchanged) gaskets and seals are dry under normal circumstances when there is a vacuum.
Z
How is a carb'd 289's pcv similar to a fuel injected 3.3.
I'm seriously asking how they are similar to the point a direct comparison being made,and how does a race engine compare to a minivan towing a trailer.
I'm seriously asking. Not being facetious.
Originally Posted By: Shannow
Originally Posted By: zray
There won't be much oil or anything else being sucked out of the crankcase during the situation described by the OP. WHY ? Because the PCV system depends on engine vacuum to do sucking. And there isn't much engine vacuum at any rpm when the throttle is wide open. Put a manifold vacuum gauge on the car and you will see little to no vacuum when the throttle is open wide at any rpm.
. That's why race cars just an exhaust crankcase evacuation system and not a traditional PCV system, the exhaust driven system works all the time, not just when there is a high engine vacuum.
Z
PCV closes on high vacuum to limit the flow...at no vacuum, it is wide open, and crankcase pressure pushes the blowby into the manifold, just like the old walking stick breathers used to do.
Correct, but those old vent tube breathers were notoriously ineffective at letting the crankcase do the "push". H ha. I should know, I ran one on my 289 HiPo for years recently. The sound you hear is me coughing.
And a PCV system without the vacuum pulling the crankcase clean is just as bad.(ineffective).the orafice of the PCV is designed for a vacuum, the pressurized crankcase is not goiing to be doing any amount of effect venting without a vacuum pulling it. Proof: check out those leaking valve cover gaskets and crankcase seals after a hard run around the track or highway. That's were the excess crankcase pressure is going, not much in comparison is making it thru the PCV. The very same (unchanged) gaskets and seals are dry under normal circumstances when there is a vacuum.
Z
How is a carb'd 289's pcv similar to a fuel injected 3.3.
I'm seriously asking how they are similar to the point a direct comparison being made,and how does a race engine compare to a minivan towing a trailer.
I'm seriously asking. Not being facetious.