There, that was my helpful post for the day.
Sure was! Thanks, Barge!
The other day I discovered oil has been spraying out my BOV, which means that oil has been drawn out of the valve-cover-breather lines and run all the way through the induction system to the throttle body.

The obvious fix here is an
oil separator or catch can. Seems like a pint-sized can would be sufficient. Some guys are attaching small, air filters to their catch cans, but this is not emission-friendly and would seem to allow air into the system that was not metered by the MAF. One cheap yet attractive option is the
Greddy/Megan catch can, but these
twin cans by Saikou Michi sure look sweet!
With the PCV system on my mind, I was wondering what should be done about the valve. The more I learned about it, the more I understood that its stock connections were not meant for boosted applications.
In a normally-aspirated system, the valve is held open by the vacuum present in the intake manifold. The valve is open so long as the pressure inside the crankcase is greater than the pressure outside the crankcase.
In a forced-induction system, the vacuum inside the intake manifold would steadily decrease as the turbo spooled. Under full boost, the intake manifold would become pressurized and force the PCV valve to remain shut, trapping the oil vapor (a.k.a. blow-by). Of even greater concern is the possibility that the "one-way" PCV valve could be forced open under boost and allow the crankcase - the volume underneath the pistons - to become pressurized, which could cause seals to leak as well as hurt performance.
So if we cannot keep the PCV valve connected to the intake manifold, then the question becomes: to what should we connect the PCV valve?
Someone tried each option on a Honda. Some guys are venting the valve to atmosphere by simply running a piece of tube under the car. Others, are venting into the exhaust stream. In each case, the hope is that there is enough vacuum to open the PCV valve and allow the blow-by to escape. Each of these options, as stated before, are unacceptable for track use, not to mention emissions. :troutslap:
In conclusion, if the system must remain closed, then the PCV valve, along with the valve-cover breathers, should be vented into the intake
after the MAF but ahead of the turbo- or super-charger. BUT WAIT... that Saikou Michi guy says this:
Saikou Michi said:
Q:Why not join the breather and the PCV line into 1 can?
A: The simplest way to explain it is this... The PCV system works in ONE direction. Under vacuum the flow comes from the valve cover through the PCV valve and into the intake manifold, during this time, the air that is being sucked out is being replaced by the air coming in through the breather hose. Air comes in, and air goes out through the PCV line. When 2 lines go into 1 can, there is NO VACUUM effect possible.
So, two cans are needed because two pathways are needed. If two pathways are needed, can both the PCV valve line and the valve-cover lines be inserted just ahead of the compressor?
Regardless, is there enough vacuum in the intake to sufficiently open the PCV valve? Manifold vacuum is -20 according to my boost gauge. I don't think the intake will create that much, at least, not before the compressor is spooled.
My final question is the same one poised by BlackCoog: Where does that other EVAP line go that is connected to the PCV valve? :help: