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Moderated by: Greg Fletcher |
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K&Ns and vapour hose | Rate Topic |
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Posted: 01-25-2009 03:59 pm |
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1st Post |
ozzadavies Member
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I've just replaced the original air filter set-up with K&Ns and, wow, what a difference. Not only does the car now sound much more purposeful but the acceleration pick-up is instant and stronger, particularly at low revs. It hardly hesitates at all now whereas before you had to clear 2000 revs to get smooth acceleration. Loving it. My question is about the crank case vapour hose. Would it be OK to simply put a breathable bag on the end of it to catch the discharge and allow any gas to escape? I was thinking of a muslin bag clamped to the end. I assume that it's OK to remove the cam cover breather pipe and just keep it open... Thanks, Ollie
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Posted: 01-25-2009 05:11 pm |
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2nd Post |
Brett Gibson JH5 20497 Member
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Ol, I just ran a flex hose under the car directly off the breather with no issues, my cam cover breather ties into it with a tee. But my car does not breath alot of vapor or condensation out, I have read in previous posts that some cars are very heavey breathers and they tend to coat the underneath, and drip oil. I guess it depends alot on what your car does. There is the option of drilling into the K&N back plate on the rear carb and plumbing into there, thats been done as well. Brett
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Posted: 01-25-2009 05:38 pm |
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3rd Post |
Judson Manning Member
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Ollie, Congrats on the K&N upgrade, I think you'll find access to the distributor, oil filter, wiring harness, etc. will be MUCH easier! The most common mistake is to pipe the vapors directly to the rear carb. As the engine ages and starts spitting more oil through the vapor hose, that mess gets pumped directly into the engine and causes all sorts of problems. The most environmentally sensitive solution is to install a catch-can to separate the oil from the gas vapors and pipe those vapors to the carbs. The early Mk I engines are actually set-up with just such a system. Judson
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Posted: 01-25-2009 06:11 pm |
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4th Post |
ozzadavies Member
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I guess you could put my engine in the 'heavy breather' category. It used to gunk up the air box. I'll sort out a catch can, but in the meantime do the gasses pose a fire risk? Thanks
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Posted: 01-25-2009 08:59 pm |
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5th Post |
John Finch Member
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I used a bicycle water bottle and mount. Routed the breather hoses to hose barbs installed in the bottle. No hose clamps for easy removal. I also installed a generic breather filter on top of the bottle. Looks kinda hokey but works. Attachment: Breather bottle sm.JPG (Downloaded 84 times) Last edited on 01-25-2009 09:01 pm by John Finch |
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