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One of my breather pipes came off on a 50mile motorway run and there was a lot of oil over the engine at the end.supose it would be like a running oil change.......
Airbox sponges?
Can someone enlighten me if I got this correctly? The blow-by mist we get from the two hoses on top of each cylinder? Where is crankcase breather located?
Presumably, crankcase breathing is via the valve covers, through the oil return passages.There have been (I think) three different breather setups for the modern small blocks...i.e., some route through the frame, some do not. But AFAIK there is no breathing directly from the crankcase.I have only seen one in person, (and briefly, so I could have it wrong) but the v9 seems to have a breathing apparatus at the forward end of the timing chest cover.
There have been several variations of the small block crankcase breather system. You are right about the V9. The oil return line has been moved from its former position at the rear of the crankcase to the front of the engine, at what is sometimes called the timing chest cover.The breather plumbing on the V7II is diabolically clever. The top frame tube acts as the oil separator. Blow-by from the valve covers is piped into two ports towards the middle-rear of the the top frame tube, which slants downward toward the rear. At the very rear (lowest part) of the frame tube, a port drains the precipitated (recovered) oil in the blow-by stream into a hose that flows through a check valve and then into the rear of the crankcase. At the front (highest part) of the frame tube is another port, which coveys the (mostly) oil-free separated air to a hose that leads to what formerly functioned as the oil separator, molded into the front of the air box. In the previous 1-TB models, this oil separator had one input hose coming from each valve cover and two oil outlets, which merged with a Y connector, and then onto the check valve and rear crankcase oil return port. However, on the V7II, three of the ports on the former oil separator are blocked off with rubber 'nipples" and the remaining port takes the blow-by air hose coming from the front of the frame tube. The only way out for this air (which still contains a small amount of oil) is through a small orifice between the former oil separator and the air box proper. Thus the blow-by air is eventually taken into the engine air intake stream.I'm working on a winter project to resurrect the former oil separator of my V7II into a second, serial, functioning oil separator, that should result in even less oil being put into the engine air intake stream. All I think I have to do is unblock the port on the left side of the (former) oil separator, connect it to a hose, lead the hose, through a second check valve, to a Y connector that will merge it with the oil return hose coming from the rear of the frame top tube, and into the rear of the crankcase. In order for this to work, I'm counting on the V7II air box to still contain the plastic mesh oil-separating blocks in the oil separator portion that are present in the earlier V7 models, even though they don't play any role in the V7II. The air box on the V7II has the same part number as on the earlier models, so I bet it still has the mesh blocks. I'll post the results later this winter.