rnettleship Posted December 16, 2013 Share Posted December 16, 2013 I just converted my road draft tube over to a PCV system on my 1950 Olds 88. 303ci. Now it looks like a traded my oil spots on my floor with light oil spray out the breather. The PCV valve I used was for a Chevy 350 with 1/2" fuel line to the carb base plate. My assumption is it all works fine until I stand on the throttle and loose all the vacuum. My vacuum at idle is 20 inc.hg.Has anyone done this conversion and have advice? My next thought was to get a breather with a port to connect into the air cleaner to create a completely sealed system. My breather is on the pipe from the timing chain cover, not valve covers.I did rings about 3k miles ago. No smoke or oil consumption. Compression is 110# across all 8 which is only 10# off spec. I assume some blow by is normal so I'm mostly just trying to keep the motor clean. I have noticed what looks like front and rear main leaks after I switched from 20-50 to 10-30 oil as well. with 10-30 I was running around 35# of pressure on the road and 50# with 20-50. If the leaks are driven by pressure build up than I'm not sure what my next move will be. Strangely, when I first finished the motor and for the first few thousand miles it did not leak at all. It all started rather suddenly. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Old Codger Posted December 17, 2013 Share Posted December 17, 2013 .First off, this is how it was done on my 32. A direct scavenge from the valve cover down to a bung welded on the exhaust. It was always scavenging (vacuuming) as the engine was running. I doubt if you're going to go this route though.I presume you are talking about removing your old draft tube, and you put the PCV valve into where the old road draft tube was???? You then ran the hose to your carb to the ported side? and are getting your fresh air drawl from your filler cap?Question, Why did you run 20-50 wt oil? To raise your oil pressure reading????? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TexasJohn55 Posted December 17, 2013 Share Posted December 17, 2013 If you block off the normal exit route through the road draft tube, the blowby HAS to exit somewhere when it exceeds the capacity of the PCV. Here is a thread of one of many discussions recently on the forum: http://forums.aaca.org/f162/pcv-system-1955-322-a-340918.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
TexasJohn55 Posted December 17, 2013 Share Posted December 17, 2013 Here is another:http://forums.aaca.org/f162/stupid-question-362041.html Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest Old Codger Posted December 17, 2013 Share Posted December 17, 2013 You beat me to it John,Also..On the Olds, if you just put in a PCV valve in the old road draft openings, and port it to the carb, it's going to suck up some liquid oil. That is going to get sucked directly into the intake..Because there is no baffling there. If you use a valve cover, and place a PCV valve there,, there is already the lifter valley splash pan on the Olds engine, which will prevent the PCV valve from sucking up the liquid oil.So, the suggestion would be to PLUG the road draft tube, and drill out a hole for the size of PCV valve cover and grommet, and plumb it that way...You are going to be drawing the fresh air in from your old oil filler cap....Which sucks (PUN) because it's really going to be unfiltered air. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rnettleship Posted December 17, 2013 Author Share Posted December 17, 2013 the draft tube port does have a baffle. valve covers are original and would be tough to alter and still look good. I'll put the draft tube back on got now Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
NTX5467 Posted December 19, 2013 Share Posted December 19, 2013 When Chevy went to PCVs for '67, they had a neat little metal cap which screwed down where the road draft tube went. It had a hose nipple on it, to which an inline pcv attached and then it went to the carb base plate on the backside. You can probably find these items (tin cap, long bolt, inline pcv, etc.) in the Corvette restoration parts industry or perhaps Classic Industries catalog. Not very ornate, but it apparently worked.There are also some push-on breather caps which have a conversion set-up to attach a pcv to them, I believe. Several different ways to accomplish adding a pcv to a vintage engine . . . the Chevy method is pretty good.Just some thoughts,NTX5467 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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