Crankcase Breather
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- Minor Fan
- Posts: 431
- Joined: Mon Jun 18, 2007 5:39 pm
- Location: Bournemouth & St Vran, Merdrignac
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Crankcase Breather
Hi does any body have a good solution to crankcase breathing that is a;not into the engine to spoil the charge, and b;wont clog every 10 miles and send oil back through the rear of the crank.I currently have a small k&n on top of a standard (1275) timing cover breather but this keeps clogging with oil vapour.Is there any body out there with a catch tank or similar with a good term of reliability?
[sig]6530[/sig]
The only solution is to suck it into the engine - and burn it! The amount is miniscule - it really won't 'spoil the charge' in any detectible way - and it solves all the oil leak problems - and saves you breathing in the carcinogenic oil fumes. The 1275 inline engine is poorly served for breathers (Mini has an additional one on the trans case) - either add one on the rocker cover and take it to the carb (or directly into the inlet manifold via a 1/8" restrictor) - or pipe the timing cover breather to the carb. I prefer the rocker cover option - this allows some air to flow through the engine from the timing cover breather, and helps to minimise mayo formation!



No, it's not. One solution is to suck it into the engine - and burn it, another is to vent to air, as some of the 1098s (among other engines) did. I've no strong opinion either way, but "The only solution" seems a little odd.bmcecosse wrote:The only solution is to suck it into the engine - and burn it! !
Andrew - LD has tried venting the fume - it's not working for him! As I explained above - the 1275 inline unit has only one breather - it's not enough when there is any blow-by. Yes - you can add another on the rocker cover - that will help to vent fume - but my expereience is that the only successful (maybe I should have put that)
solution is to burn the fume. I had a 1340 Mini engine that had only thin rings on the pistons - it had v good compressions, and ran v well - but it had some crankcase pressure, was smelly (oil fume smell - actually made eyes water after a bit) ) and leaked oil - and after a period of idling had an impressive plume of blue smoke. Connected the rocker breather to the manifold (via the 1/8" restrictor) and the blue smoke stopped - and so did the leaking. Yes - the idle was slightly upset - but it was a 544 cam anyway, so it was never going to be smooth. it worked well for my engine !




As I said, no strong opinion - just seems a little short sighted to claim your way's the ONLY way. Maybe his problems are with the filter - I have had none running just the factory one with a length of tube venting to underside - but understand what you're saying, just don't much like the absolute certainty that it's THE RIGHT ANSWER.