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01-21-2016, 10:28 AM | #1 |
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Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
I'm about to take the plunge and build a 355 Chevy small block For my 1964 c10. I want to keep the old school look so I'm going to remove script valve covers, 4 barrel intake with oil fill tube etc.... Off of my 283 and put those on the 355 to keep the original stock look. I've been reading alot on crankcase ventilation and I'll be missing my rear Vent on back of 283 block by going with the 350 since they vented off the VC.
Any suggestions or tips please?? Thanks
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
01-21-2016, 10:30 AM | #2 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
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01-21-2016, 10:59 AM | #3 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
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01-21-2016, 11:13 AM | #4 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
It's only an info link.
Other ways to do it. You can get grommet/baffles to go in the back of the cover and use an inline pcv. |
01-21-2016, 12:12 PM | #5 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
planning on running script covers on my '68 327. been thinking I'm going to do something like this. If you can weld it's a pretty cool option.
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'66 C10 SWB '64 C2 roadster '38 Indian Scout Flattracker '70 Triumph T120R '81 Laverda Jota |
01-21-2016, 03:44 PM | #6 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
I thought about going this route too but unsure if these are baffled inside or does a rubber grommet and then filter cap press in on top? (Oil spitting out top)! Delmo makes these unsure if they're still being produced by him?
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
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01-21-2016, 01:45 PM | #7 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Get a '60's sealed oil fill tube with a PCV port on it... any late '60s SBC fill tube from a muscle car supplier, with a screw-on fill cap.
At the base of the front of the carb is a PCV port. Get a screw-in PCV port and plug it in to the carb, and at the oil fill tube, get a brass barbed nipple, and run a hose from the nipple to the PCV. At the back of the intake, it'll require a little fabrication: If it's an aftermarket aluminum intake, there are usually ribs on the underside of the intake, between the carb pad and the distributor. Find a shop that can weld aluminum. Take a piece of 1/8-inch aluminum plate (or so), drill a SMALL hole in it, and then weld the plate across two of those ribs to make a sealed compartment on the underside of the intake--sealed, except for that small hole. On the top of the intake, above that compartment, drill and tap a hold for a barbed brass nipple. (actually, drill and tap the hole BEFORE you weld the plate underneath, so you don't fill the compartment with aluminum chips). On your air cleaner, put a barbed nipple or some other kind of port on the INBOARD side of the air filter. You've seen this on engines with the PCV in the valve covers. One of them runs a rubber hose to the air cleaner. Here's how it'll work: The PCV will draw from the front of the carb, at it's base. It will suck through the sealed oil fill tube at the front of the engine. The column of air will draw through the lifter valley, up through the little hole in the sealed chamber, through the nipple, through the hose to the air cleaner housing, where it will draw FILTERED outside air. I ran this system on the crate 350 in my Suburban for over 80,000 miles. Make sure you have a PCV that flows in the right direction: They are designed as push or pull. If you have the wrong one, it'll fill your air cleaner housing with oil. There used to be a diagram of a stock '62 car "California" sealed PCV system in the YearOne catalogs. Do a web search for "Closed PCV System" for '60s Chevys. -Brad
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01-21-2016, 03:37 PM | #8 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
I'm running a quadrajet carb and cast iron intake
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
01-21-2016, 03:45 PM | #9 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
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01-21-2016, 03:49 PM | #10 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
This style fill tube??
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
01-21-2016, 09:22 PM | #11 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Yeah, that's the fill tube you want. (or a stock black one).
I don't see how you would create the "chamber" under the cast iron intake, for the air cleaner port to feed from. I used an Edelbrock C3B intake for mine--aluminum. You can find used spread bore Edelbrocks that'll work with your Q-jet if that's what carb you're using. -Brad
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'61 Suburban daily driver: off the road due to 180-pound 8-pt buck! '62 K-10 long-step project '61 C30 Camper, aka "Valdez" There's no cool like Old School |
01-21-2016, 09:34 PM | #12 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
this is how mine looks But I don't see how you'll vent it in the back.
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01-22-2016, 12:22 AM | #13 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
This is what I am going to use when I build the 350 I have set aside for my '66. It comes with a chrome fill tube and breather. I am going to remove the made in USA emblem and paint it the correct green along with the block and aluminum heads to give a stock 327 appearance. then I will top it off with these.
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01-21-2016, 10:10 PM | #14 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
I've always heard that venting from the front side of the lifter valley to the back side is less effective than air drawn into one valve cover and out the other, which routes down thru the crankcase.
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`63 C-10 Shortwide Roller 305 LT1 cam, Eddy 500 T5 |
01-21-2016, 11:52 PM | #15 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Could be but look how clean this motor is inside. I would have preferred to pull from the back where the oil seperater is but seems to work good this way. any, we don't have vented covers.
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01-22-2016, 12:36 PM | #16 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
I have bone stock 1968 327 with the oil fill tube in the intake, the cap just pushes on and has oiled mesh in it for filtering. That's all it has for engine ventilation, is there a reason you couldn't just do that? Is more crankcase ventilation needed? The guy had been driving the impala it came out of everyday for many years with no issues.
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01-22-2016, 01:20 PM | #17 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
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'66 C10 SWB '64 C2 roadster '38 Indian Scout Flattracker '70 Triumph T120R '81 Laverda Jota |
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01-22-2016, 02:32 PM | #18 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
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01-22-2016, 05:06 PM | #19 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
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It never says clean. -Brad
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'61 Suburban daily driver: off the road due to 180-pound 8-pt buck! '62 K-10 long-step project '61 C30 Camper, aka "Valdez" There's no cool like Old School |
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01-22-2016, 02:03 PM | #20 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
http://67-72chevytrucks.com/vboard/s...ht=dino&page=8
Go to post 178 to see how Dino did it. Thanks to 60-66 |
01-22-2016, 11:42 PM | #21 | |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Quote:
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1949 Chevrolet 5 window 1970 C10 CST swb, fleet side 1964 C10 swb, bbw 1968 Camaro coupe 1968 camaro convertible (cream puff) 1972 K10 swb 4wd SuperCheyenne |
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01-24-2016, 01:22 AM | #22 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Dont know if it is possible but take a look at the gmc v6 305 design.
POSITIVE CRANKCASE VENTILATION:*is provided by using manifold vacuum to draw fresh air through the engine. Air enters through a*replaceable paper-element breather, travels up through the crankcase to the cylinder head covers,*then through air flow regulating valves directly into an intake port of each head, carrying with it,*into the combustion chamber, harmful sludge-forming fumes and moisture laden air. Bearings and*other precision parts last longer . . . maintenance is less . . . engine life is extended. Maybe can try to drill and tap bottom of intake or each head and install these pcv and filter at back. |
01-22-2016, 04:36 PM | #23 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
The valve covers have no holes in them. Just rebuilt the engine and there is no PCV by the distributor. I'll post pics when home from work.
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01-22-2016, 05:42 PM | #24 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
Just like your house in the summer you get better "draft" with 2 windows open. Just the vented push cap on the fill tube isn't enough. A `68 327 should have a PCV fitting on the drivers side of the dist hole and a hose to the carb base. Earlier small blocks had a road draft tube that came out here and went down the back of the block.
The P stands for positive where the engine vacuum ensures ventilation, not just the breeze passing across the bottom of the road draft tube.
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01-22-2016, 07:54 PM | #25 |
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Re: Crankcase ventilation using old tins???
I was grabben acouple dists last summer at the yard and I took a pic of this 64 impala set up. ya gotta look close but you can see the PCV line comin from the back of the motor to the carb base
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