sailor
Jackass of all trades
My Bj60 had a tube from the valve cover straight down to atmosphere. My HDJ 81 has a hose from the valve cover routed as high up to hood level then straight down to the wheel well. No evidence of liquid oil in 20 k km.
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Hey,
I was just wondering how your catch can setup is working for you. I have been eying the same air filter from Princess Auto (like a shoe store for men).
Couple questions about your setup: did you plumb back into the air intake? Or did you vent to atmosphere after the filter? How much oil are you collecting per month? Did your gray smoke decrease?
Thanks, and great catch can idea!
My Bj60 had a tube from the valve cover straight down to atmosphere. My HDJ 81 has a hose from the valve cover routed as high up to hood level then straight down to the wheel well. No evidence of liquid oil in 20 k km.
Straight down to the top of the wheel well? or the back/front? I'm just trying to get an idea of how high up the opening to atmosphere sits. Is there any kind of deflector on the end of the hose? or is it just a wide open hole? I know it sounds useless, but is there any way you could snap a picture of how Toyota accomplished this?
I considered doing something like that with my 1KZ, but was concerned with the potential for having the engine shut down in deep water.. and/or dirt/mud getting flung into the opening when things get messy.
That's not a catch can, that's a catch culvert!!
almost fell off my chair laughing so hard.For us rusty 40 owners, that crank case vent tube is a life-saver, my front drive shaft will never rust.![]()
For us rusty 40 owners, that crank case vent tube is a life-saver, my front drive shaft will never rust.![]()
That's a positive spin on things - I just learned about this after getting concerned from the amount of leakage on my driveway.. thought it was a bad gasket someplace, glad to know it's normal. I was advised to connect a short hose and let it drip into the frame - that should keep one side of the frame rust free as a bonus..
I was going to make a soda bottle oil catch to collect the oil.
I want this for two reasons. The first is to see how much is blowing by, and the second is to stop that source of oil underneath my rig. I have some other leaks to track down and the wind blowing that oil mist everywhere makes it a bit tought. Plus, while not thinking checmically, I plan on redoing my frame and the last thing I want is oil all over it....
For those interested, the way to make the pop bottle collector, you just cut a soda bottle in half, slide the top half onto your blowby pipe and tape it on with something that can resist heat. Make sure to poke some holes in the neck of the bottle before this step.
Then, push and form steel wool below the holes you poked, but above the end of the pipe. Pack tight or find some way to glue it into place., then tape the bottom half of the bottle on. The wool makes the oil condense and fall back into the bottle, while the poked holes let gasses out.
I read about this on a thread here (no idea where it is) and have yet to try, but since I am going to install a new tranny soon, I'd like to clean up the underside and fix all of the easy leaks before I get under there for the afternoon.
K