Oil in tube
#1
#4
Remove and clean out that hose with carb cleaner. Having a little in there is fine, but you might need a new oil separator, that is supposed to help keep oil OUT of that PCV hose, some will usually find it's way in there so cleaning it out on occasion is a good idea.
This is from a Honda FAQ but PCV concept is roughly the same....
If the PCV valve gets plugged, here's what happens, roughly in order:
1. Excess crankcase pressure begins to back up the engine's breather tube, into the intake air tube upstream of the throttle body
2. Engine management system senses absence of air from plugged PCV valve, and adjusts fuel mixture accordingly. Engine makes slightly less power.
3. Oil begins to be pumped into the air intake tube through the breather hose, upstream of the throttle plate.
4. Oil runs down the intake tube into the throttle body.
5. Oil sludges up the throttle body and throttle plate. Gas pedal starts to get sticky. Airflow reduced. Engine management adjusts mixture again. More power loss, possible poor driveability.
6. Idle Air Control (IAC or EACV) valve gets contaminated and begins to stick.
7 .IAC cannot adjust idle air mixture to compensate for plugged PCV valve. 8. Idle drops, may become erratic as throttle plate cannot close completely.
8. Oil drips into intake manifold runners. Blue smoke seen out of tailpipe.
9. Breather tube begins to get constricted from oil contamination and airflow is reduced. Crankcase pressure mounts dramatically.
Oil pushed past valve guide oil seals. More blue smoke.
10.Dripping on driveway as oil is pushed past seals.
This is from a Honda FAQ but PCV concept is roughly the same....
If the PCV valve gets plugged, here's what happens, roughly in order:
1. Excess crankcase pressure begins to back up the engine's breather tube, into the intake air tube upstream of the throttle body
2. Engine management system senses absence of air from plugged PCV valve, and adjusts fuel mixture accordingly. Engine makes slightly less power.
3. Oil begins to be pumped into the air intake tube through the breather hose, upstream of the throttle plate.
4. Oil runs down the intake tube into the throttle body.
5. Oil sludges up the throttle body and throttle plate. Gas pedal starts to get sticky. Airflow reduced. Engine management adjusts mixture again. More power loss, possible poor driveability.
6. Idle Air Control (IAC or EACV) valve gets contaminated and begins to stick.
7 .IAC cannot adjust idle air mixture to compensate for plugged PCV valve. 8. Idle drops, may become erratic as throttle plate cannot close completely.
8. Oil drips into intake manifold runners. Blue smoke seen out of tailpipe.
9. Breather tube begins to get constricted from oil contamination and airflow is reduced. Crankcase pressure mounts dramatically.
Oil pushed past valve guide oil seals. More blue smoke.
10.Dripping on driveway as oil is pushed past seals.
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General Range Rover Discussion - Archived
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10-20-2005 11:57 PM