PCV Oil Catch Can on N/A 5.3 fills FAST...
#31
Just as a follow-up, I have not had a chance to do a compression test yet, but I did get a chance to change the oil. Went from full synthetic 5w-30 to MaxLife synthetic blend 10w-40 (I know the owners manual says not to use it, but I have 150k+ and I'm pretty sure its no longer within factory tolerances) and my oil consumption was cut dramatically. Now after 100 miles my catch can only fills about 1/4 of the way...still way too much, but a heck of a lot better than overflowing after 100 miles.
#32
You're saying just changing from 5-30 to 10-40 has a dramatic change on oil flow out of the PCV? That's interesting. How large is your catch can that it would fill in 100 miles. I bought a small air compressor water seperator at Harbor Freight for $7.99 and installed it. I ran 700 miles to Houston over the weekend and had about 2 tablespoons in it when I got back. Engine is low mileage. It was oil and water mixed.
#33
I have an AMW catch can on my 05. It has the fixed orifice PCV valve. I empty it once a month. I get a couple of OZs of oil out of it. It has been on there 4 years with no issues.
Last edited by dlstewart01; Feb 4, 2010 at 11:16 PM.
#34
I'm still trying to understand this "fixed orifice" thing. I thought the variable orifice was there for a reason. GM isn't the only one using the fixed orifice on the valve cover. There must be a maintenance interval to remove the rocker cover to clean the PCV inside because it will eventually get gunked up.
#35
I ran the fixed orifice PCV for a while and I got the same amount of oil in my home made catch can as with the spring and plunger PCV. Then when I upgraded from my home made catch can to the AMW the setup whistled with the fixed orifice PCV and drove me nuts so I swapped back to the original PCV.
#36
I ran the fixed orifice PCV for a while and I got the same amount of oil in my home made catch can as with the spring and plunger PCV. Then when I upgraded from my home made catch can to the AMW the setup whistled with the fixed orifice PCV and drove me nuts so I swapped back to the original PCV.
Last edited by dlstewart01; Feb 4, 2010 at 11:30 PM.
#37
If a fixed orifice(mounted in rocker cover) has no moving parts it doesn't fit the definition of a valve. A PCV is supposed to move from fully closed to partially open to fully open depending on crankcase pressure, intake vacuum or intake pressure(backfire). A fixed orifice doesn't do these things. It just stays open all the time. In this day and age with the EPA controlling emissions so closely I can't figure out why they went to an unregulated system.
#38
If a fixed orifice(mounted in rocker cover) has no moving parts it doesn't fit the definition of a valve. A PCV is supposed to move from fully closed to partially open to fully open depending on crankcase pressure, intake vacuum or intake pressure(backfire). A fixed orifice doesn't do these things. It just stays open all the time. In this day and age with the EPA controlling emissions so closely I can't figure out why they went to an unregulated system.
#39
I'm not surprised it didn't work for you . How could it? It's just on open port. A PCV is not a catch can. It is only supposed to regulate crankcase pressure(air flow containing oil and water) not reduce oil consumption due to excessive blowby. The more I think about this and see the smegma in my catch can(canister is clear plastic) the more I believe vehicles should come from the factory with a catch can, but then I think they should come from the factory with underdrive pulleys too so what do I know.
#40
Catch can n00b question - where do those two black hoses coming out of the catch can plug into on a fixed orifice PCV system? Does anything get removed from the engine when installing these, or just relocated?


