Originally posted by G..
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Oil leak, rear lower intake.
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I don't run an adjustable regulator aon anything I have or have had. I honestly don't see a need for one. That's just my opinion. I screwed a barb into the side of mty RPM II intake and connected it to the filler neck on my VC in the Cobra. I never had any issues with it that way. The factory setup in the 94-95 Cobras puts the nipple about 8" in front of the tb in the intake tube. The lean issue could be caused by a slight miss. there are many reasons for the miss. I would be curious to see what your AFR looks like in open loop during idle conditions. I would like to know if it's really lean. Maybe for some reason your cas is going into open loop on occasion.
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Originally posted by Diabolic View PostI don't run an adjustable regulator aon anything I have or have had. I honestly don't see a need for one. That's just my opinion. I screwed a barb into the side of mty RPM II intake and connected it to the filler neck on my VC in the Cobra. I never had any issues with it that way. The factory setup in the 94-95 Cobras puts the nipple about 8" in front of the tb in the intake tube. The lean issue could be caused by a slight miss. there are many reasons for the miss. I would be curious to see what your AFR looks like in open loop during idle conditions. I would like to know if it's really lean. Maybe for some reason your cas is going into open loop on occasion.
System voyage goes low because my belt is slipping on the alternator.
320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'
DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq
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Mind, I deleted the egr, so the computer should be looking for egr signal. It's my understanding that when an egr is inoperative it will run rich.
~14:1 cruising down the highway. At wot it shows 12-12.5 the entire pull.
320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'
DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq
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Originally posted by jackass racing View Postmotor is prolly worn out and creating more crank pressure than pcv can handle......as G.. said
A loose motor is a fast motor!
320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'
DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq
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So I did not have the pcv filter, I don't think it will help anything. And I don't think the seal is blowing out, it's just leaking. It's dry everywhere, smoke comes up from it running down the block, rolling off the starter right onto the header tube. I'm thinking It smokes at wot because more oil is flowing, more leak and more heat so more smoke!
Lets hope!
For as far as blow by goes, at idle the oil cap has vacuum, but I know at rpm is when it's more prone to blow by.
I'll post up after I fix the leak, install the filter and add a hose from the valve cover.
320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'
DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq
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[QUOTE=91CoupeMike;977505]So I did not have the pcv filter, I don't think it will help anything. And I don't think the seal is blowing out, it's just leaking. It's dry everywhere, smoke comes up from it running down the block, rolling off the starter right onto the header tube. I'm thinking It smokes at wot because more oil is flowing, more leak and more heat so more smoke!
Lets hope!
For as far as blow by goes, at idle the oil cap has vacuum, but I know at rpm is when it's more prone to blow by.
1, the pcv filter will help keep pcv system from pulling oil droplets into/through the intake.
2, the silicone/block seal is fighting 2 battles right now explained in # 3 and 4.
3, The oil leaking more at higher rpm isn't because of more oil flowing, it's because of more crank case pressure. At wide open throttle there is no vacuum being produced in the intake, as you've already noted. Because of this, blow by (it occurs naturally and is increased by age and engine wear) and the pressures created by the rotating assembly build inside the motor. IT WILL FIND IT'S WAY OUT SOMEWHERE.
4, Since you are only running a pcv valve and no vent (the tube that used to go to your throttle body) you are allowing excessive vacuum to pull on the inside of the motor at idle, cruise, and decel (heavy decel from a high rpm downshift can pull 26-28 inches possibly). This can physically suck seals and silicone sealed areas in. Secondly it has the opposite effect under wide open and low vacuum times. Now you are creating pressure with no natural way to vent, pressure builds and it's gong to push something out.
Now as far as Diablolic is saying about connecting the vent side to the intake, I feel he is incorrect. This is going to create a vacuum leak in a sense because now you are pulling full intake vacuum on the crankcase and not giving it a vent source. Someone else correct me if I'm wrong.
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The air it's pulling has already been metered. I have literally dozens of hours datalogged in my cobra and noted no change in part throttle nor wot AFR changes when moving the hose to the rear of the tb. No change in the LTFT's. Just my personal experience here.
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My question is, why does it matter of its before or after the throttle blade?
When its wide open it shouldn't matter?
I couldn't see before or after the MAF, but since the air is already metered it shouldn't matter?
Fill me in here guiz
320rwhp. 7.67 @ 90mph 1.7 60'
DD: 2004 GMC Sierra VHO 6.0 LQ9 324whp 350wtrq
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