^ x2
Here's something that I don't understand in many of the approaches above: they treat the two valve-cover ports the same, as sources from which to pull from the crankcase. But that means there is no breather tube as designed, substantially limiting the flow through the crankcase and the circulation path. This seems hugely significant to the ability of the PCV system to clean the oil. Is someone able to explain the logic to me?
I'd also like to understand why PCV systems are designed for reduced flow at idle. Is there a downside to excess flow? Maybe increased IAT, but that seems insignificant under vacuum conditions.
Thanks for the feedback. Isn't it as simple as adding a separator in the suction side of the OE system?I'll be nice answering the first question in regard to the previous approaches: You are asking the right questions and on the right track to developing a proper system that not only hopefully provides a crankcase suction to promote ring sealing at high RPM, yet also circulates the crankcase at low RPM to help keep the oil clean. None of the systems described above do both.
From what I read about PCV valves, they are open with a zero pressure differential, close against pressure driving flow toward the valve cover, and proportionally close with pressure driving flow out of the valve cover. Maybe I need to experiment with the PCV valve from an NSX. Are you saying they are simple check valves?As far as the second question, idle is when the flow is the greatest through the crankcase. The large vacuum behind the closed TB promotes a lot of circulation.
Thanks for the feedback. Isn't it as simple as adding a separator in the suction side of the OE system?
From what I read about PCV valves, they are open with a zero pressure differential, close against pressure driving flow toward the valve cover, and proportionally close with pressure driving flow out of the valve cover. Maybe I need to experiment with the PCV valve from an NSX. Are you saying they are simple check valves?
good point. It does appear that two separators is best.Yes, but to do it correctly, you need to have it on both lines to the intake. The rear valve cover during periods of high blowby (high engine RPM) may switch from suck to blow!
In the 97+ manual, it's on 11-166 and the schematic is on 11-9. And for my car, an '00, the schematic is in the supplement because they added the secondary air injection. But Honda's description in the SM is not inconsistent with the general descriptions of PCV valves as reducing flow under vacuum while stopping reverse flow.Look on page 11-134 of the SM for a description how the OEM system works. Keep in mind Honda got their car front/back messed up in this diagram. The only PCV valve is on the front VC.
From what I read about PCV valves, they are open with a zero pressure differential, close against pressure driving flow toward the valve cover, and proportionally close with pressure driving flow out of the valve cover. Maybe I need to experiment with the PCV valve from an NSX. Are you saying they are simple check valves?
That's a good point Dave. Seems like two catch cans will be in order. Darn. Although you may have seen some of the so-called clean-side separators that replace the oil filler cap and allow the entering air flow but no exit oil flow. Perhaps they suffer from the same problem you raise with a check valve.
As for flow through the PCVV generally, it will have a ~10 psi driving force under vacuum.
I dont know know if any blow by oil makes it to my intake but I'm interested tonfind out. I'll bet that was the cause of all my problems after the rebuild with vacuum line 4 clogging. But now that the rings have seated perhaps it's not the same degree of an issue.
As far as the design of the can itself goes, I find the discussion in this forum post and following it quite interesting. I think that the author overstates the problem with media proximate to the exit port (in the Moroso design), and also think the issue could easily be solved with a spacer of sorts as I don't really see the exit flow reaerosolizing the oil. And I like the use of coalescing material in the maximally cooled exit flow in addition to the entrance flow.
You can try and add some course steal wool to the part of the canister where the filters in connected to the canister to act as a prefilter and allow the hot oil vapors to condence on the steel wool and drip back into the canister, but the real solution is to add the steel wool and add a vacuum source in place of the filter to atmosphere. The vacuum source needs to be after the air intake filter but before the turbo. To get maximum draw on that line it is best to weld a tube in your intake pipe at a 45* angle and allow a small amount of the tube to protrude into the intake tube cut on a 45* angle.
Dave
Just reread this thread.
This reply interests me though. Would you replace the filter/filter with a vacuum line or could you also add the vacuum line as well along with the filters? Ultimately the filters would just breath but a vacuum source would just be extra assurance?
That's a good point Dave. Seems like two catch cans will be in order.
@kingtal0n what about vapors in the flow when the PCV valve is flowing? It seems that a catch can is beneficial in that those vapors are undesirable for combustion.
And on the fresh-air side, I agree that generating suction with a restrictive air cleaner is undesirable, but a catch can for flow toward the intake accounts for any flow created by blowby driving the pressure differential. In other words, assume no filter (or a perfectly clean, nonrestrictive one), and WOT results in flow towards the intake because of elevated crankcase pressure created by blowby. In that case, a catch can seems helpful to remove vapors in the flow.
As to the negative effect of a catch can, placing one in the fresh-air flow would seem to have nearly no downside. And for flow from the PCV valve, I take it you prefer to avoid the increase in total volume between the valve and intake because that increase will slow the response? I.e. Create a low-pass filter at the valve for pressure variation at the intake? My guess is that typical intake pressure variation is an order of magnitude slower than the connection between the valve and intake, so I don't see that realistically affecting performance. But I could be off in that guess.
I was contemplating using the exhaust as the vacuum source but...my local mechanic advised me against it.thanks for the questions
Preferably, you would have a pcv system which uses the exhaust as a way to pull from the crankcase. This will bypass the combustion chamber and route directly into the exhaust (normally it would move from crankcase -> intake -> chambers -> exhaust) So you are bypassing the intake->chambers portion of the chain of command, it still winds up in the exhaust system anyways either way. With the exhaust driven system, whatever the pcv system pulls from the crankcase is no longer being burnt, is no longer being allowed to coat the inside of the intake manifold/valves/combustion chamber with oil/combustion byproducts pulled from the crankcase. Although these exhaust driven systems can be difficult to setup and require (so I am told) a very free flowing exhaust system to work correctly (I have not done much of my own testing besides one engine perhaps 10-12 years ago, with good success I might add)
I might have posted this alrdy a year ago but fwiw here it is again. This is the OEM setup for an Originally turbo vehicle, such as sr20det. "A" is the traditional way to route PCV to the intake. If we move the tube to "B" we are bypassing the combustion chambers and routed into the exhaust directly.
A vapor, can/should be called a gas. Gas state molecules will NOT stop in a catch can.
There is not a single OEM manufacturer that I know of which uses a "can" between the intake and pcv valve to catch "vapors" since as we discussed, a catch-can won't do you any good for those.
That is why the slightly restrictive filter causing PCV action is a CLEANING benefit to the engine: it allows the crankcase to be pulled below atmospheric pressure during WOT so that oil is not pushing into the seals of the engine, causing leaks over time.
So you can think of any plumbing volume added to the crankcase in general as a way to increase the potential for oil leaks everywhere, and/or diminishing PCV action.
Vapors condense when they cool. A catch can or AOS filled with high-surface-area material like metal wool provides a lot of opportunity for condensation. That and the slowed velocity resulting from the larger flow area are what I understand the benefit to be of an AOS. Moreover, it seems reasonable to expect some aerosolized oil droplets in the flow, which will also be collected if they impinge on a surface or if the flow drops below a certain velocity.
these are devices integrated to the oil baffle capability of the engine. The term "oil separator" is synonymous with "oil baffle" and has nothing to do with catch cans. If an engine has an external baffle then the original designers realized the necessity for one (they 're-engineered' their engine's internal baffle and new, updated design happens to be external to the crank case) It helps keep the airflow free from oil droplets/vapors or whatever you want to call them. I am not sure what the partial pressure of engine oil is at 212*F but I am somewhat confident that it is negligible with respect to the quantity that is able to pass a given random OEM baffle in a liquid state (even if finely 'micronized' or whipped up into tiny droplets). In other words, if there is some partial pressure action involved, then it will be there regardless of whether the oil is sitting in the crankcase or in a 'catch-can' type device, and headed towards the intake manifold. The warm oil is going to have gas state molecules leaving per unit time and there is no way to prevent any true gaseous product from eventually making its way in... or out of a 'can' intended to collect the oil vapor as a liquid product. If you remove the plumbing from a high mileage PCV tract you will find perhaps a large quantity of liquid oil or 'sludge' type of product which collected in the tube on it's way to the intake manifold due to similar circumstances to what I just described. If you remove the tube and replace it will a 'can' it will perform the same function, there was never any reason or need to use a larger volume unless the actual volume of liquid oil passing the crankcase is somehow increased (due to additional blowby or a failing baffle pushed beyond its OEM performance expectations i.e. due to increased redline or boost)Perhaps you are distinguishing a catch can from air-oil separators? I don't find it useful to talk about a catch can as an empty vessel with ports in it. Why someone would use that is beyond me. I am interested in devices designed to condense vapors and remove droplets from the flow. OEMs do use such devices, such as the vortex-based collector that BMW has used.
It is a simple fact that if the pressure of the crankcase goes higher than atmospheric pressure, it will push on the oil seals of the engine and help facilitate oil leaks. You do not want this condition to exist, ever; therefore it is important to create a pressure drop (below atmospheric) in the crankcase whether at WOT or IDLE or cruise. The idle/cruise is done by the pcv valve action. The WOT pressure is driven down by the slightly restrictive air filter.Unless atmospheric pressure is somehow driving flow, I don't see why it's particularly relevant that the low-pressure end of a flow path is slightly below atmospheric. Here, the high-pressure end is driven by internal engine conditions. I'd have to know what pressures we are talking about in order to have any idea of the magnitude of the effect.
I agree above that "it will not have a meaningful affect" =General statements like this are rarely all that useful unless you provide some reason or evidence that the effect is significant. Increased volume may affect the transient response but as I have pointed out, it seems unlikely that it would have a meaningful effect.
This space does not care about "transient response" except with respect to the engine oil seals experience of pressure (changing pressure on either side of the oil seals is where the 'transient response' is having an affect, and is negligible overall)kingtal0n said:A smallish catch-can on the fresh air side is somewhat negligible with respect to flow, since the pressure differential in this tract is often very very tiny (often 3-15" of H2O) and many will install one here to protect their turbocharger's compressor from the liquid oil which can be pulled or pushed from the crankcase.
Vapors condense when they cool. A catch can or AOS filled with high-surface-area material like metal wool provides a lot of opportunity for condensation. That and the slowed velocity resulting from the larger flow area are what I understand the benefit to be of an AOS. Moreover, it seems reasonable to expect some aerosolized oil droplets in the flow, which will also be collected if they impinge on a surface or if the flow drops below a certain velocity.
I was contemplating using the exhaust as the vacuum source but...my local mechanic advised me against it.
The reason beeing that in case of an engine malfunction ( broken piston as an example) a large quantity of oil would go straight into the exhaust and catch fire immediately.
In no time at all the whole car goes into flames with no chance of extinguishing the fire...
Jason is correct. Look at the OEM rubber PCV lines. They are even insulated to ensure the bad stuff stays in solution as it travels from the valve covers back to the intake manifold. I doubt it makes a huge difference, but I kept my new rubber hoses insulated as well, and tried to place the catch cans in strategically cooler engine bay areas. That theoretically ensures any condensables remain suspended as a hot vapor until they can condense on the relatively cooler air/oil separator media.