C3 Tech/Performance V8 Technical Info, Internal Engine, External Engine, Basic Tech and Maintenance for the C3 Corvette
Sponsored by:
Sponsored by:

Crankcase ventilation

Old Dec 15, 2008 | 05:23 PM
  #1  
Droshki's Avatar
Droshki
Thread Starter
Pro
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 541
Likes: 1
From: Freeport FL
Default Crankcase ventilation

What's everybody (non-stockers) doing about this? My old engine just had hoses coming up off the valve covers to the air cleaner area. Pretty poor setup. My air cleaner base has a knockout in it, but I dont see really what I could put there- seems it would be up to me to make something up.

I consider plumbing it to the big vac line at the base of the carb, but the brake booster is already going there, and IIRC there is some concern about oil fumes eroding the brake booster, so that might not be too good.

Then there is the option of just putting breather caps on the valve covers, but then I dont want an oily mess all over my engine either. I would think they have foam in them to trap the oil, but ???

Ideas? Photos?
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 05:58 PM
  #2  
tonyv123's Avatar
tonyv123
Instructor
 
Joined: Sep 2007
Posts: 198
Likes: 0
From: Colorado Springs Colorado
Default

Can you weld?

http://store.summitracing.com/partde...5&autoview=sku
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 05:58 PM
  #3  
Durango_Boy's Avatar
Durango_Boy
Team Owner
 
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 24,125
Likes: 15
From: Columbia Missouri
Default

Is there a vacuum port in use at the back of the manifold?

You want the PCV valve in the driver's side valve cover, with the vacuum tube getting vacuum from the manifold.

Then install a breather in the passenger side valve cover, and you're done.

Having the brake booster and PCV on manifold vacuum is best so make sure the booster vacuum line is getting manifold vacuum and not ported carb vacuum.

Also, make sure there is a filter in the line to the booster.
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 06:12 PM
  #4  
Droshki's Avatar
Droshki
Thread Starter
Pro
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 541
Likes: 1
From: Freeport FL
Default

The only real source of vacuum I have is the big pipe at the rear and base of the carb. As I will be running my B&M 144 (roots) blower, there is nothing really usefull to pull off the manifold. The only conection there is for my boost gauge, and this is where I will tie in my power valve circuit and my dizzy advance.

You dont think tying into this same carb line where the booster is currently connected is an issue as long as I use a filter on the booster to keep crankcase fumes from the booster?
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 06:15 PM
  #5  
Droshki's Avatar
Droshki
Thread Starter
Pro
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 541
Likes: 1
From: Freeport FL
Default

To further clarify, this big pipe on the back of the carb (Holley 850) connects directly to the bottom of the carb. There is always good vacuum there, as its is sitting right about the spinning blower blades. Anything below the blower (manifold) sees sometimes vacuum, sometimes boost, depending on the driver's foot position
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 06:28 PM
  #6  
Durango_Boy's Avatar
Durango_Boy
Team Owner
 
Joined: Aug 2006
Posts: 24,125
Likes: 15
From: Columbia Missouri
Default

Originally Posted by Droshki
You dont think tying into this same carb line where the booster is currently connected is an issue as long as I use a filter on the booster to keep crankcase fumes from the booster?

I personally wouldn't share the lines. Likely you'd get too low and the brakes wouldn't function properly.

If you have to it'll work but maybe not the best.

Have you thought about a Hydrobooster instead of a vacuum brake booster? The Hydrobooster is powered by the power steering system for the brake assist instead of engine vacuum. The unit itself is smaller, better looking and has much more performance than a vacuum brake booster.

If you're intrigued, PM me your email address and I will send you an information file on the Hydrobooster. It's not a 'fix' for your PCV issue but it will not only allow you to use that one source for the PCV but it'll let you keep good solid brakes no matter what the vacuum level of your engine. It's also smaller and looks better in place of the large vac can.



The chrome sleeve over the accumulator and the chrome master cylinder are things I added. Normally the accumulator is gold.
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 06:35 PM
  #7  
Droshki's Avatar
Droshki
Thread Starter
Pro
10 Year Member
 
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 541
Likes: 1
From: Freeport FL
Default

Mmm....let's see if I understand here

So what you are saying is that if I try try to use this vaccum source to evacuate the crankase, AND run the brake booster, I will possibilty lose too much vac to the crankcase and then not have enough vac for the boster?

This would explain why the PO didnt do that, and only ran hoses from the valve covers up to the carb air cleaner area, which only intermittently resulted in the carb ingesting the blow-by, which was considerable due to the S/C.

Intresting, yes, I better have a look at this hydro boost thing.
Reply
Old Dec 15, 2008 | 09:02 PM
  #8  
yellow 72's Avatar
yellow 72
Le Mans Master
20 Year Member
 
Joined: Apr 2000
Posts: 5,202
Likes: 10
From: cincinnati ohio
St. Jude Donor '09
Default

To keep things nice and dry under the hood you should run a PCV system of some sort. I don't know if a carb spacer with an additional vacuum port would work for you or not.
The hydroboost would eliminate the need.
I have a PCV valve in the drivers side rocker cover and an clean air intake hose in the other routed to a puke tank type breather...

Reply

Get notified of new replies

To Crankcase ventilation

Corvette Stories

The Best of Corvette for Corvette Enthusiasts

story-0

10 Ugly Corvettes That We Still Kinda Love

 Joe Kucinski
story-1

Top 10 Most Expensive Corvettes Ever Sold on Bring A Trailer

 Brett Foote
story-2

10 Things Every Corvette Owner Needs (2026 Edition)

 Michael S. Palmer
story-3

8 Most "Only Corvette Owners Understand" Quirks and Problems

 Pouria Savadkouei
story-4

10 Reasons the C6 Z06 is Still A Performance Benchmark After 20 Years

 Joe Kucinski
story-5

How Much Horsepower Every Corvette Engine "LOST" in 1972

 Joe Kucinski
story-6

Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

 Michael S. Palmer
story-7

Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

 Joe Kucinski
story-8

150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

 Joe Kucinski
story-9

8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

 Verdad Gallardo


Thread Tools
Search this Thread

All times are GMT -4. The time now is 07:37 PM.

story-0
10 Ugly Corvettes That We Still Kinda Love

Slideshow: 10 ugly Corvettes that we still kinda love.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-06-03 10:34:17


VIEW MORE
story-1
Top 10 Most Expensive Corvettes Ever Sold on Bring A Trailer

A lot of money has changed hands at the online auction house over the years.

By Brett Foote | 2026-06-03 10:21:50


VIEW MORE
story-2
10 Things Every Corvette Owner Needs (2026 Edition)

Slideshow: 10 great gifts Corvette enthusiasts actually want for Father's Day!

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-06-03 15:43:40


VIEW MORE
story-3
8 Most "Only Corvette Owners Understand" Quirks and Problems

Slideshow: These are the quirks, annoyances, and oddly lovable problems that every Corvette owner eventually learns to live with.

By Pouria Savadkouei | 2026-05-28 09:31:39


VIEW MORE
story-4
10 Reasons the C6 Z06 is Still A Performance Benchmark After 20 Years

Slideshow: 10 reasons why the C6 Z06 is still a performance benchmark after 20 years.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-27 17:20:09


VIEW MORE
story-5
How Much Horsepower Every Corvette Engine "LOST" in 1972

Slideshow: How much horsepower every Corvette engine lost in 1972.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-27 16:54:53


VIEW MORE
story-6
Top 10 DOs and DON'Ts for Protecting Your Convertible Top!

Slideshow: How to Protect A Convertible Top: 10 DOs & DON'Ts

By Michael S. Palmer | 2026-04-03 00:00:00


VIEW MORE
story-7
Top 10 Most Explosive Corvettes Ever Made: Power-to-Weight Ratio Ranked!

Slideshow: The 10 most explosive Corvettes ever built based on power-to-weight ratio.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-20 07:23:03


VIEW MORE
story-8
150 hp to 1,250 hp: Every Corvette Generation Compared by the Specs That Matter

Slideshow: From C1 to C8 we compare every Corvette generation by the numbers.

By Joe Kucinski | 2026-05-12 16:54:12


VIEW MORE
story-9
8 Coolest Corvette Pace Cars (and Replicas) of All Time

Slideshow: Some Corvette pace cars became collectible legends, while others perfectly captured the look and attitude of their era.

By Verdad Gallardo | 2026-05-11 09:50:51


VIEW MORE