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  • Breather system and oil consumption

    This has been irking me for a while now . . .

    Complete rebuilt motor with a very mild build - motor runs great; still getting used to the chatter of having LS1 springs on the street It's built tight (like I prefer) . . . but, first experience building a "performance" 60*.

    Anyhow, after extended periods at idle, the motor starts to burn oil - not a problem when cold. I at first thought this was simply the rings seating and thought nothing of it, but after 500mi break-in, there's been no change. Alright, must be buggared valve seals (they were a little tighter than I expected installing, but they still installed fine) . . .

    Through this time I've also been fighting a weird chuggle/hiccup that would occur only at idle, and seemed more frequent after longer idle periods as well. At first I passed it off to higher intake volume, and the PCM simply going through fuel trim re-learn. Didn't go away, and in fact got worse the longer the vehicle would sit. No codes, PCM data all appear perfectly fine . . . so, I figure perhaps the IAC is starting to fail (200K miles on OE sensor), and decided to remove the TB to clean the passages and all . . .

    That's when I notice the pool of clean oil sitting right at the TB inlet - front of the TB is bone dry, only the back side. Only way it could get there is through the PCV (possibly the breather tube, but doubtful). I decide to experiment and through a vacuum cap on the PCV vacuum line and drove the car a bit . . . go figure, the smoking has practically gone away, and so has the idle hiccup. I put two and two together, and figure the motor is pulling a hard enough vaccum that oil is getting past the PCV into the intake, and coating the plugs . . .

    So - my question (sorry it took so long to get to it ) - any ideas on how to curtail the oil flow into the vacuum lines while still keeping an operable PCV and breather? I had thought of installing a remote catch can, but realize that could affect the operation of the PCV (change in vacuum), and would still have to be drained occasionally (would prefer not to have to). I'm thinking my best option would be to pull the front valve cover off and make some kind of baffle under the PCV port - but not sure if clearance is a problem with the rocker (at least, right off the top of my head - if need be I can pull it and check the clearance).

    I'm more or less curious if anyone has run into this already, and what kinds of ingenious work arounds were implimented (aside from disabling the PCV/breather entirelly - which is out of the question)?
    N-body enthusiast:
    {'87 Grand Am SE - 3.0 90* v6} / {'93 Grand Am LE - 3.3 90* v6}
    {'98 Grand Am SE - 2.4 Q4} / {'99 Grand Am GT1 - 3400 60* v6}

    Current Project:
    {'90 Chevrolet C1500 Sport 350TBI}

  • #2
    I don't really have anything to offer, except there should already be a stock baffle in the valve cover...?
    -Brad-
    89 Mustang : Future 60V6 Power
    sigpic
    Follow the build -> http://www.3x00swap.com/index.php?page=mustang-blog

    Comment


    • #3
      How does a catch can change the vacuum? Its a sealed unit. I ran one on my old 3.4 DOHC setup (rebuilt) and yes, you have to drain it, sometimes very often, sometimes not so much.
      Ben
      60DegreeV6.com
      WOT-Tech.com

      Comment


      • #4
        I was pretty sure there was, too . . . but I might be wrong. My lazy self hasn't actually tried popping the PCV out yet to look I'll check it tomorrow morning as the car is sitting at my shop ATM.

        But, alright then, in the event a baffle already exsits - that limits my options further.


        Originally posted by SappySE107 View Post
        How does a catch can change the vacuum? Its a sealed unit. I ran one on my old 3.4 DOHC setup (rebuilt) and yes, you have to drain it, sometimes very often, sometimes not so much.

        Sorry, it's been a long day

        I made a mistake in that post and stitched two different thoughts together. I had meant to say I had thought of simply capping the vauum line and installing a beather filter to allow for atmospheric ventillation - but this doesn't allow for proper crankcase ventillation . . . as well, the pull through from the breather side could potentially affect driveability as the intake would be pulling unmetered air from the other side of the motor - unless I installed a breather on the rear cover as well, and capped the port in the intake tubing. I realize a catch can is probably the only route, I'm just not happy with having to keep an eye on it (yes, I'm a mechanic, and yes I'm lazy as hell when it comes to my own rides ).
        Last edited by prophiseer; 09-22-2010, 08:25 PM.
        N-body enthusiast:
        {'87 Grand Am SE - 3.0 90* v6} / {'93 Grand Am LE - 3.3 90* v6}
        {'98 Grand Am SE - 2.4 Q4} / {'99 Grand Am GT1 - 3400 60* v6}

        Current Project:
        {'90 Chevrolet C1500 Sport 350TBI}

        Comment


        • #5
          If the baffle is indeed there and you are still picking up oil then It would seem you might have a lot of oil on the top end of the motor. You didn't run a high volume pump did you? What kind of pressure do you have at idle and what weight of oil are you running? Is your PCV valve new?

          The breather line should be connected to the intake tube and the PCV should connect to manifold vacuum. Is this correct on your car? Also the breather line should be plenty far enough away from the throttle body to avoid being under vacuum. If you have a restrictive filter you may get a very slight vacuum on the breather causing it to suck oil out of the valve cover. You can replace the breather tube with a filter on the valve cover if you wish. Just remember to plug the hole in the intake tube.
          1993 EXT. CAB, 3.4L V6 TBI, 5spd manual. Sonoma
          1990 4Door, 3.2L V6 TBI, 5spd manual. 4X4. Trooper
          Because... I am, CANADIAN

          Comment


          • #6
            Originally posted by betterthanyou View Post
            If the baffle is indeed there and you are still picking up oil then It would seem you might have a lot of oil on the top end of the motor. You didn't run a high volume pump did you? What kind of pressure do you have at idle and what weight of oil are you running? Is your PCV valve new?

            The breather line should be connected to the intake tube and the PCV should connect to manifold vacuum. Is this correct on your car? Also the breather line should be plenty far enough away from the throttle body to avoid being under vacuum. If you have a restrictive filter you may get a very slight vacuum on the breather causing it to suck oil out of the valve cover. You can replace the breather tube with a filter on the valve cover if you wish. Just remember to plug the hole in the intake tube.

            No high volume oil pump - simply a new stock OE unit. Not sure of what current oil pressure is, I'll break out the gauge tomorrow and check (still haven't installed a gauge to the car). Oil weight is plain 'ol 10-30 ATM. After I finish out the first 1500mi I intend to switch back over to 5-30. PCV is new as well, I also swapped it out with a couple of known good units I keep in my toolbox (on the off chance it was defective), but no change to the condition.

            PCV and breather are stock setup for a '99 3400. Breather line runs into the intake duct about 1.5"-2" in front of the TB. Should be more than enough distance . . . but, this motor is also pulling quite a bit harder than a stock 3400, too. Air filter isn't restricted, either - nice and clean.

            You sure about replacing the breather tube with a standard or remote filter on a 3x00? Correct me if I'm wrong, but I've always been under the impression with these (and most other modern motors) that replacing the breather tubing with a standard old-school style filter will induce a vacuum leak, as intake vacuum is still pulling from the opposite side of the motor via the PCV. Unless, of course, the PCV were capped off, which is not exactly something I want to do with a street motor . . .
            N-body enthusiast:
            {'87 Grand Am SE - 3.0 90* v6} / {'93 Grand Am LE - 3.3 90* v6}
            {'98 Grand Am SE - 2.4 Q4} / {'99 Grand Am GT1 - 3400 60* v6}

            Current Project:
            {'90 Chevrolet C1500 Sport 350TBI}

            Comment


            • #7
              The breather would remove the PCV completely. I don't recommend that at all. The PCV side is what sucks the crankcase pressure out based on engine vacuum. Putting a breather on will mean more crankcase pressure, which worsens the ring seal and lowers hp and mpg. Just run a catch can and keep the vacuum through the PCV.
              Ben
              60DegreeV6.com
              WOT-Tech.com

              Comment


              • #8
                Well, baffle is present (couldn't remember, lol) - oil pressure is good (optemp: ~40-45psi @ 700 RPM / ~55 @ 1500 RPM).

                So, it's looking as if the only viable solution is an oil/air seperator for the PCV and breather sides. Joy, more stuff to cram under the hood . I guess I'll look into making my own, as this would be the cheaper route - I've got some ideas, so we'll see how that pans out.
                N-body enthusiast:
                {'87 Grand Am SE - 3.0 90* v6} / {'93 Grand Am LE - 3.3 90* v6}
                {'98 Grand Am SE - 2.4 Q4} / {'99 Grand Am GT1 - 3400 60* v6}

                Current Project:
                {'90 Chevrolet C1500 Sport 350TBI}

                Comment


                • #9
                  Originally posted by SappySE107 View Post
                  The breather would remove the PCV completely. I don't recommend that at all. The PCV side is what sucks the crankcase pressure out based on engine vacuum. Putting a breather on will mean more crankcase pressure, which worsens the ring seal and lowers hp and mpg. Just run a catch can and keep the vacuum through the PCV.
                  I think he meant to put a breather on the rear valve cover vent, which is connected to the Intake PRE TB... so in theory there is no vac on that line ever... As noted the only time I can think of where it would contain a VAC would be when you go WOT and you have a slightly dirty air filter.

                  If you want to eliminate that pulling oil into the intake then just replace it with a tube going from your valve cover to one of these...





                  I think you could replace the whole PCV system with this type of setup, but I'm not sure how they would work on our motors, since no one has tested something like this before. I'm half tempted to this year though.
                  Last edited by 3400-95-Modified; 09-23-2010, 10:26 AM.

                  Got Lope?
                  3500 Build, Comp XFI Cam 218/230 .050 dur .570/.568 lift 113LSA
                  Fully Balanced, Ported, 3 Angle Valve Job, 65mm TCE TB, S&S Headers.
                  Stage-1 Raybestos/Alto 4t60e-HD, EP LSD, 3.69FDR
                  12.61@105 Epping NH Oct 2015 Nitrous 100shot (melted plugs) 13.58@98.8 N/A 3200LBS

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Yea I meant keep the PCV valve in place but change the breather tube to a small filter.

                    On 4.3L V6 engines and some V8's with TBI injection they had what people refer to as a puke ring below the air cleaner assembly. This was just a metal spacer with a tube in it to facilitate a breather hose. With this ring right above the TB it would allow oil into the air intake system and would cause all sorts of nasty buildup in the throttle body. So the solution was to ditch the puke ring and replace the breather hose with a small filter.
                    1993 EXT. CAB, 3.4L V6 TBI, 5spd manual. Sonoma
                    1990 4Door, 3.2L V6 TBI, 5spd manual. 4X4. Trooper
                    Because... I am, CANADIAN

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Originally posted by betterthanyou View Post
                      Yea I meant keep the PCV valve in place but change the breather tube to a small filter.

                      On 4.3L V6 engines and some V8's with TBI injection they had what people refer to as a puke ring below the air cleaner assembly. This was just a metal spacer with a tube in it to facilitate a breather hose. With this ring right above the TB it would allow oil into the air intake system and would cause all sorts of nasty buildup in the throttle body. So the solution was to ditch the puke ring and replace the breather hose with a small filter.
                      Yes what you have in mind with the TBI's is exactly the same thing we have going on, and essentially what we could do.

                      I still think if someone tested it, the e-vac setup is probably the way to go... that would ditch the PCV system all together and replace it with something that will pull a good vac at WOT.

                      From what I've been reading, you would be switching from an Closed PCV system to an Open one by removing that tube and putting a breather on it.

                      Open PCV Systems
                      The open system draws fresh air though a vented oil filler cap. This presents no
                      problem as long as the vapor volume is minimal. However, when the crankcase
                      vapor becomes excessive it is forced back through the vented oil filler cap and
                      into the open atmosphere. The open PCV system, though successful at removing
                      contaminated vapors from the crankcase, is not completely effective as a
                      pollution control device.
                      Closed PCV Systems
                      The closed PCV system draws fresh air from the air filter housing. The oil filler
                      cap in this system is NOT vented. Consequently, excess vapor will be carried
                      back to the air filter housing and from there into the intake manifold. The closed
                      system prevents vapor, whether normal or excessive, from reaching the open
                      atmosphere. The closed system is very effective as an air pollution control
                      device.
                      One other tidbit I got from a Ford Forum.

                      Closed PCV systems are required in MAF systems to ensure an un-metered air (vacuum leak) condition is not present.....
                      Makes sense because the PCV could be allowing air into the intake which is pulling from open atmosphere through the added filter, so therefore any air going in that way is un-metered and can result in a hard tuning project.
                      Last edited by 3400-95-Modified; 09-24-2010, 01:48 PM.

                      Got Lope?
                      3500 Build, Comp XFI Cam 218/230 .050 dur .570/.568 lift 113LSA
                      Fully Balanced, Ported, 3 Angle Valve Job, 65mm TCE TB, S&S Headers.
                      Stage-1 Raybestos/Alto 4t60e-HD, EP LSD, 3.69FDR
                      12.61@105 Epping NH Oct 2015 Nitrous 100shot (melted plugs) 13.58@98.8 N/A 3200LBS

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I have a similar rough idle after installing new cyl heads and manifolds. Gets worse as the engine warms up. I suspect a vacuum leak though as the RPM is always above what the PCM commands and the IAC is reported as fully cosed. That or a high mileage timing set having been introduced to stronger valvesprings.

                        I also always find a small puddle of oil behind my TB. Oil consumption has never been an issue though so I assumed it was normal.
                        1995 Grand Am SE

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Originally posted by 3400-95-Modified View Post
                          I think he meant to put a breather on the rear valve cover vent, which is connected to the Intake PRE TB... so in theory there is no vac on that line ever... As noted the only time I can think of where it would contain a VAC would be when you go WOT and you have a slightly dirty air filter.

                          If you want to eliminate that pulling oil into the intake then just replace it with a tube going from your valve cover to one of these...





                          I think you could replace the whole PCV system with this type of setup, but I'm not sure how they would work on our motors, since no one has tested something like this before. I'm half tempted to this year though.
                          so basically from what i found you install the long piece downstream in the exhaust pipe and hook it up to the rear valve cover and then get rid of all the other pcv stuff. right or am i wrong.
                          this is the search i got the info from
                          sigpic
                          99 Grand Am GT
                          3400/3500 -Solid trans mount--TCE 65mm T-body---85mm LS2 maf---1 1/4' TCE intake spacers with 3400 upper--SLP Catback with flowmaster 80--TOG headers
                          Modded 3400 lifters with LT1 springs---Comp Cams 26986 Springs
                          1357 cam 227 233 .050 dur
                          515 515 lift 112 lsa
                          15.232@88.85mph on stock 3400---New time to come


                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Yeah you can run one or two of them I guess... I've seen dual setups on the Modified's at thompson. You would have to seal the rest of the motor so it actually has the ability to pull a VAC though... In other words, Plug the front PCV hole very good.

                            Azrael, sounds like there is something going on with your setup there... Did you check the TB to be sure its not open too far? Whats your TPS voltage at idle? I found that 0.6 is a good reading for that, and also 30-40 IAC counts at idle is a good place to be.

                            Got Lope?
                            3500 Build, Comp XFI Cam 218/230 .050 dur .570/.568 lift 113LSA
                            Fully Balanced, Ported, 3 Angle Valve Job, 65mm TCE TB, S&S Headers.
                            Stage-1 Raybestos/Alto 4t60e-HD, EP LSD, 3.69FDR
                            12.61@105 Epping NH Oct 2015 Nitrous 100shot (melted plugs) 13.58@98.8 N/A 3200LBS

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              there were a few of the setups in the links i found that used pumps.

                              probably wouldn't be too bad to run one from each valve cover like the links you posted above. might try that next year.
                              sigpic
                              99 Grand Am GT
                              3400/3500 -Solid trans mount--TCE 65mm T-body---85mm LS2 maf---1 1/4' TCE intake spacers with 3400 upper--SLP Catback with flowmaster 80--TOG headers
                              Modded 3400 lifters with LT1 springs---Comp Cams 26986 Springs
                              1357 cam 227 233 .050 dur
                              515 515 lift 112 lsa
                              15.232@88.85mph on stock 3400---New time to come


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