LS3 Oil Path
So does the oil in the valve cover area flow downhill into the rod bearings or back into the oil pan?
Per the diagram it appears that way but that wouldn't make sense. It would need oil pressure to do that and since the oil at the top of the valve cover area, it is no longer under pressure, so I would have to flow down back into the pan via gravity.
Last edited by Pettrix; Feb 5, 2025 at 04:09 PM.
Per the diagram it appears that way but that wouldn't make sense. It would need oil pressure to do that and since the oil at the top of the valve cover area, it is no longer under pressure, so I would have to flow down back into the pan via gravity.
And ALL of the bearings need pressurized oil, not leftover gravity oil from the rocker arms. All spillover from rockers, pistons, bearings drips back down into the pan to be recovered, pumped and filtered back through the system again
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That is, gravity and the PCV system discuss who gets to have some oil. If gravity was not present, there would be only oil entering the PCV system and none going to the pan.
Oil will go places when energy is provided to move it, such as gravity. PCV uses pumping action from some kind of pump to provide energy to drive flow, the engine is a pump and it can provide that energy, or an external pump like dry sump or turbocharger could be used instead as a source of energy to drive fluid flow. All OEM vehicles with turbos use the turbo as energy source to drive PCV flow at wot for example, its a couple percent of engine power that an natural aspirated engine gives up if they want to drive actual PCV flow at WOT.

The esoteric nature of oil in PCV flow is the influence of pressure on oil droplet radius and density in a field of gravity
High crankcase pressure suspends higher oil droplet density and radius which is pulled into the PCV system
That is, gravity and the PCV system discuss who gets to have some oil. If gravity was not present, there would be only oil entering the PCV system and none going to the pan.
Oil will go places when energy is provided to move it, such as gravity. PCV uses pumping action from some kind of pump to provide energy to drive flow, the engine is a pump and it can provide that energy, or an external pump like dry sump or turbocharger could be used instead as a source of energy to drive fluid flow. All OEM vehicles with turbos use the turbo as energy source to drive PCV flow at wot for example, its a couple percent of engine power that an natural aspirated engine gives up if they want to drive actual PCV flow at WOT.

The esoteric nature of oil in PCV flow is the influence of pressure on oil droplet radius and density in a field of gravity
High crankcase pressure suspends higher oil droplet density and radius which is pulled into the PCV system
Aftermarket thermostatic units can apparently be spec’d to not pass the entire amount of oil flow.
If anyone has more info/better input, please update.
*edit*
talked a bunch with improved racing rep. I think ill go with their corvette specific cooler, mounted to the foglight area. going to see what my temps look like in normal driving first.
Last edited by Ahrmike; Jan 25, 2026 at 05:05 AM.



















