Valve Cover Holes - yes or no?

fasttback

New Member
Apr 16, 2005
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Northern CA
I bought some Motorsport tall valve covers and they do not have breather holes, but can be drilled. Originally my car had breathers.

I'm for the breathers because of the ability to relieve and reuse blow by gases depending on configuration.

My question - what ventilation setup would be best for a modified sbf:

Breathers open to the atmosphere,

Breathers hooked up to engine vacuum (via pcv valve), or

nothing at all?
 
For a carbureted, naturally aspirated engine in good condition

I'd run one PCV from one valve cover to the plenum chamber. The other valve cover would have a hose to the base of the air cleaner inside the filter.
 
brianj5600 said:
I run mine open on both sides. Oil in the cyclinder can cause detonation, so no pcv for me. I think pcv is an emmissions thing. I have never seen one on a racecar.

To the guys who are saying they are running them open, do you just mean that you have breather caps on both sides and no pcv hook up?
 
Before I built my motor, it used to have a lot of blowby. I fashioned a fitting with a gas filter that stuch straight up into the air. The oil would catch in the filter and drain back in to the engine, and the cleaner gasses could escape. It wasn't pretty, but it worked really well. I stole the idea from a car at the drag strip.
 
Good description and reason for having a PCV valve

The PCV Valve, or Positive Crankcase Ventilation valve is an emission control device that routes unburned crankcase blowby gases back into the intake manifold where they can be reburned. The PCV system is one of the oldest emission control devices, and also one of the most beneficial. Besides totally eliminating crankcase emissions as a source of air pollution, the constant recirculation of air through the crankcase helps remove moisture which otherwise would cause sludge to form. Thus the PCV valve extends the life of the oil and engine. The PCV valve requires little maintenance. The valve and filter should be replaced somewhere around 30,000 to 50,000 miles(see the vehicle owners manual for service intervals).


Taken from this site:
http://www.faqfarm.com/Q/What_is_a_PCV_valve

Of course you need to actually drive your car more than 8 miles at a time to truly see the benefits :D
 
65ShelbyClone said:
I have a 10k mile engine and still get the film somewhat, but my covers aren't baffled and neither are the breather extensions. I have some stainless potscrubbers I was going to stick in there, though.

A few cars ago (EFI) I had problems w/oil out the breathers and problems w/the pvc. I replaced non baffled covers for baffled ones, added the pot scrubbers, replaced the pvc, & added a fuel filter in line to keep an eye on an oil being sucked back thru. No oil no problem.