I have a small block chevy in my 1983 El Camino and I have oil leaking onto the starter and then a few drips on the ground, when I got home today I took the PCV off and there was less drips, meaning when I disconnected the PCV there were only 2 drops, whereas last night when I came home I parked the car and the next day those 2 drips ran to the other side of the pan, it has a new PCV and on the other side is a chrome breather that is about a year old and looks fine. The drips are obviously below the starter and not at the back of the oil pan, the oil pressure switch is on the other side of the block, driver's side. Now El Camino's of that era that did not have the oil pressure gauge had the oil pressure sender by the distributor, the valve cover gaskets seem fine, the engine has 360,000 miles and is on the rinse phase of Auto-Rx, I pulled a trailer a few days ago and the leak was pretty bad, so no more trailering, the back of the block by the starter seems wet but I cannot see any new oil, it has to be coming from somewhere, car is running fantastic, no smoking, no loss of power, maybe I will have to totally clean off the engine to see where the leak is, since I took the PCV out and there was only a few drips could this be PCV related, if I drive it tonite and come home, should I take the breather off and disconnect the PCV and if there are no leaks the problem is some pressure in the engine. I heard it is not a good idea to take out the PCV and put a breather on because the PCV sucks vapors out of the valve covers and back into the carburetor to get burned, I have the Edelbrock valve covers with the baffles in them, could these baffles be some kind of restriction. Or could this just be that a small block with 360,000 miles is always going to leak.