PCV valve

cooter2506

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Apr 8, 2007
Messages
733
Dont slam me for this one but, What is the purpose of a PCV valve? and What are the symptoms of a bad one? just currious
 

derekpfeiffer

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Apr 3, 2008
Messages
214
Re: PCV valve

Positive crankcase venhilation....it vents unburt gasses back to the intake where they can be burnt...they should rattle when you shake them...if they are stuck...they can make an engine use oil.

hope this helps
 

Robj

Lieutenant
Joined
Mar 22, 2007
Messages
1,441
Re: PCV valve

The allow you crankcase to relieve pressure. If they don't work properly, pressure increases and may cause you to burn or leak oil. They are cheap and should be replaced when a tune-up is done.

Have a great day,

Rob.
 

John_S

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jun 21, 2004
Messages
4,269
Re: PCV valve

Are you considering to add them to the boat in your signature? There should not be any on that year engine, unless a prior owner "improved" it.
 

Windykid

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Apr 17, 2007
Messages
1,177
Re: PCV valve

Symptoms of a bad PCV valve is oil backing up the dip stick. When a valve is bad the engine cant breath. The oil is preasurised and force out.
 

mkast

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Nov 6, 2002
Messages
1,934
Re: PCV valve

A whole bunch of engines came with a hollow PCV.
They were used just to connect the breather hose from the valve cover to the intake.
A hollow PCV doesn't have any spring pressure to over come.
 

WizeOne

Commander
Joined
Mar 23, 2008
Messages
2,097
Re: PCV valve

Essentially a PCV valve is a smog device. In the good old days, when pollution was king, motors vented their crankcase blow-by gasses out of a 'road draft' tube into the atmosphere.

The 'positive' in PCV refers to the fact that the vent hose is hooked to a manifold vacuum source so that the blow-by gasses and pressure build up are sucked back into the engine in an attempt to reburn them.

The check valve opens briefly every time that vacuum drops due to acceleration. Then it closes back up to prevent your engine from running hellaciously lean.

The type of vent that mkast is speaking of does not involve a PCV valve, it is more akin to the old road draft tube. The blow-by gasses and crankcase pressure are simply continuously vented to the topside of the carburetor via a fitting(s) on the outside of the spark arrestor, hoping that they will be injested.
 

JCF350

Lieutenant Junior Grade
Joined
Oct 21, 2007
Messages
1,149
Re: PCV valve

A hollow PCV doesn't have any spring pressure to over come.

Neither does a real PCV, it is a weighted disc (that's why it rattles when you shake it). :)
 
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