I included the Cam Spec so you all can see and give your opinion on weather I need a PCV or not.
My research on the internet says yes I do, what do you guys think?
I'm looking at M/E Wagner Performance Dual Flow Adjustable PCV Valve.
Dart SHP Block
Mahle 10.5:1 Pistons
AFR Heads
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Well, since your breathers don't go back to your intake... yeap. Those breathers will eventually fill with oil and then drip down the side of your motor. Plus all of that condensed vapor is going to eventually cover the motor and collect dirt.
At 10.5:1 and a .027" ring end gap you're looking at about 1% leakage. It's a lot of air.
If you eliminate one breather and run the other one to the intake tube I'd consider not having one. But if you don't have a PCV in one valve cover and the breather in the other, it will shorten oil life.
Short answer is... one breather tube to the intake tube after the filter... the other valve cover goes through a PCV to unported vacuum on the intake.
PCV on the driver side? Breather tube on the passenger side, or does it matter what side.
Thank you all for your help.
Ed
GM always had the breather on the passenger side valve cover,and the PCV valve on the drivers side--probably to encourage a "cross flow" by pulling fresh air in from the opposite side of the crankcase..
Having both on the same valve cover might not work as good..
This diagram will explain it better--if you had the pcv and breather on the same valve cover,the pcv would likely only pull fresh air in from the breather,instead of creating the proper vacuum in the crankcase to be effective..
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I ran dual PCV valves on my last 454 engine. My cheap Chinese chrome valve covers cam with a smaller PCV grommet on one side, and the other side had a breather cap size grommet so I found a reduced size grommet for that side, which allowed me to plug in a PCV valve. I ran a vacuum T-line that connected both PCV valves to my carburetor intake manifold vacuum port.
What did you use to let air into crank case?