Hmm? Envalve eliminates excess blow by?
Hmm? Envalve eliminates excess blow by?
Found this as I was searching the net and it makes sense to me how it works. Reason being I'm thinking about buying this is because I am like most LT1's and am very tired of that little bit of blow by entering the intake manifold and coating it all in oil. I've done compression checks and everything checks out and I'm not down on power but I'm just tired of the mess. I've also tried breathers but them I just end up with oil on the valvecover itself. So anyway what do you guys think? It costs $40 which is alot for a pcv valve but if it works then good. The lady said her husband has been selling these since 89 and have never had one returned. Also she didn't know much because her husband has passed away and she just pretty much sells them now. She knows a little but not a pro by any means. She said she has one on her 2003 Cadillac so seems like it would work for us.
http://www.envalve.com/difference.html
http://www.misterfixit.com/envalve.htm
http://www.misterfixit.com/blow-by.htm
http://www.envalve.com/difference.html
http://www.misterfixit.com/envalve.htm
http://www.misterfixit.com/blow-by.htm
Best thing to do is find the source of the excessive blowby and fix it. Next alternative is a knockout can in the vent line to the throttle body, or the Deutsch elbow filter. There is no magic cure.
If you do buy one of these, note that the designer claims he can now run his 72 Ford truck for 4 years before changing the oil - whether it needs it or not? Think of all the monely you'll save.
If you do buy one of these, note that the designer claims he can now run his 72 Ford truck for 4 years before changing the oil - whether it needs it or not? Think of all the monely you'll save.
HAHA yea I saw the 4 year claim too which I could care less about. I'm just trying to keep oil out of my intake tract and manifold. Last time it was even in the elbow a little bit which makes no sense to me because the compression check was fine.
It's a SCAM! There is NO difference between this and any PCV. It does not and cannot "create a vacuum". If you have excesive blow by you need to fix it, NOT buy $40.00 PCV's.
I've highlighted the last line which explains why your getting oil in your manifold.
The PCV valve connects the crankcase to the intake manifold from a location more-or-less opposite the breather connection. Typical locations include the opposite valve cover that the breather tube connects to on a V engine. A typical location is the valve cover(s), although some engines place the valve in locations far from the valve cover. The valve is simple, but actually performs a complicated control function. An internal restrictor (generally a cone or ball) is held in "normal" (engine off, zero vacuum) position with a light spring, exposing the full size of the PCV opening to the intake manifold. With the engine running, the tapered end of the cone is drawn towards the opening in the PCV valve, restricting the opening proportionate to the level of engine vacuum vs. spring tension. At idle, the intake manifold vacuum is near maximum. It is at this time the least amount of blow by is actually occurring, so the PCV valve provides the largest amount of (but not complete) restriction. As engine load increases, vacuum on the valve decreases proportionally and blow by increases proportionally. With a lower level of vacuum, the spring returns the cone to the "open" position to allow more air flow. At full throttle, there is nearly zero vacuum. At this point the PCV valve is nearly useless, and most combustion gases escape via the "breather tube" where they are then drawn in to the engine's intake manifold anyway.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
350350
Fuel and Ignition
14
Aug 11, 2015 12:03 PM
96SilverRam
Parts For Sale
1
Aug 9, 2015 04:15 PM



