Jump to content
SAU Community

Oil Catch Can/pcv Setups...


Samon
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hey guys

I am buying a CC (greddy style/D1 etc - the square shaped ones) and I want to mount it like Hamish did

(http://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/129549-oil-catch-can-mounting-and-roughting/page-2?hl=+oil). I will baffle it by putting stainless steel inside. I have 2 questions

1. does it matter where the stainless steel wool/stuff is placed inside the CC?

2. does the hose from the rocker cover have to go to a specific port/hose barb etc on the CC?

Thanks in advance guys

Amir

http://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/129549-oil-catch-can-mounting-and-roughting/page-2?hl=+oil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 11 months later...

I have a catch can setup two cam cover hoses straight to catch can and the return back to original return on the turbo inlet. I have notice that i have have massive amount of condensation in my catch can clear water type that has a strong e85 smell i don't have any trace of water in my oil when checking the dip stick and noting to instigate that i have a gasket bypass issue Is this normal or do i need to get it checked out ?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Normal with e85, warm up tune can make a noticeable difference though. You want to get it in closed loop asap after cold start.

Matt

Hi Matt

Anyone you can recommend that i can go to that can do this tune? not sure if i can do it on mine as i am running a Nistune ECU

Anton

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hi Matt

Anyone you can recommend that i can go to that can do this tune? not sure if i can do it on mine as i am running a Nistune ECU

Anton

You need to post up your location in your profile if you want a tuner that is not thousands of miles away.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 months later...

Running a single turbo on a rb26dett, anyone ever vented the crankcase through the rear turbo oil return. I was thinking about tying it together with the rocker cover breather hoses and then to a catch can and either going to atmosphere or running a hose back to the intake. to create some vacuum in the crankcase. What do you guys think? I'm just wondering if i'd be sucking oil up instead of just pressure.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 6 months later...

Did my catch can install this weekend, this thread was the most useful for me since I wanted to keep my pcv. Came out really good and runs very good so far!

What catch can is that bud?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 7 months later...

Does anyone have any drawings or illustrations of what sort of baffling should be inside the catch can for a track setup?

Is it extensive?

A picture would be nice.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Just now, KiwiRS4T said:

Stangely enough Google has heaps. Just Google "baffled catch can design"

I figured i would ask here, as being a GTR owner, getting real world GTR examples that work would be a start :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share




  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • For sure, bromance with common shit box interests.
    • People like Johnny Dose Bro might be laughing at my post because I accidentally added 100mm to my numbers. 350-355 is indeed the lower limit. 450 is off-road Skyline spec.
    • What is the "compromise" that you think will happen? Are you thinking that something will get damaged? The only things you have to be concerned about with spherical jointed suspension arms are; Arguments with the constabulary wrt their legality (they are likely to be illegal for road use without an engineering certificatation, and that may not be possible to obtain). A lot more NVH transmitted through to the passengers (which is hardly a concern for those with a preference for good handling, anyway). Greatly increased inspection and maintenance requirements (see above points, both).   It is extremely necessary to ask what car you are talking about. Your discussion on strut tops, for example, would be completely wrong for an R chassis, but be correct for an S chassis. R32s have specific problems that R33/4 do not have. Etc. I have hardened rubber bushes on upper rear control arms and traction rods. Adjustable length so as to be able to set both camber and bump steer. You cannot contemplate doing just the control arms and not the traction arms. And whatever bushing you have in one you should have in the other so that they have similar characteristics. Otherwise you can get increased oddness of behaviour as one bushing flexes and the other doesn't, changing the alignment between them. I have stock lower rear arms with urethane bushes. I may make changes here, these are are driven by the R32's geometry problems, so I won't discuss them here unless it proves necessary. I have spherical joints in the front caster rods. I have experienced absolutely no negatives and only positives from doing so. They are massively better than any other option. I have sphericals in the FUCAs, but this is driven largely by the (again) R32 specific problems with the motion of those arms. I just have to deal with the increased maintenance required. Given how much better the front end behaves with the sphericals in there.....I'd probably be tempted to go away from my preference (which is not to have sphericals on a road car, for 2 of the 3 reasons in the bulleted list above), just to gain those improvements. And so my preference for not using sphericals (in general) on a road car should be obvious. I use them judiciously, though, as required to solve particular problems.
    • Aren't we already on one? SAU unforgettable bromance.
    • Easiest way to know is to break out the multimeter and measure it when cold, then measure all the resistances again once it gets hot enough to misfire. Both the original ignitor and the J Replace version. Factory service manual will have the spec for the terminal measurements.
×
×
  • Create New...