| dougburgy |
Sep 13, 2016 05:19 PM |
I would also suggest looking at your flame trap...they get clogged over time, and when they do you have positive pressure inside your engine that will push oil out of any orifice where the seal isn't 100%. Just like act1292 pointed out. I did my flame trap the first time, without pulling everything apart around the intake like most folks say you need to do. I have real long needle nose pliers, and with some effort was able to pull and replace that little $1.00 part. Companies like IPD also make a flame trap re-locator kit, to make subsequent inspections/changes super easy. There is also the oil separator that bolts to the block under intake manifold. If I remember correctly, I was able to remove that without removing intake...just took off throttle body assembly to get under there to remove/clean/replace if needed. Read up on it, as there is one thing you don't want to do (can't remember for sure, but something to do with o-ring not getting pushed into block or something...google volvo b230 flame trap and oil separator...tons of info out there). If you do take off intake, make sure to buy a new gasket for it. My separator was pretty dirty. Also cleaned out all the tubes/hoses that go to flame trap, etc. That video shows things pretty well, but lots more out there also. Great chance to clean up that dirty throttle body too...which helps idle quality, etc.
As pointed out, while running, the oil fill hole in the valve cover should suck, not blow. There is an old trick I read about...if you take off the stock oil fill cap, and turn it upside down on the fill hole while car is running...the vacuum that "should" be there should be able to hold the cap over the hole without it vibrating away from it. Mind does!! This video shows what I mean
Again, the idea is that if oil separator box, any of the hoses, or flame trap are clogged...the positive crankcase pressure will manifest leaks that may otherwise not surface with proper negative pressure. When you find yourself "chasing" down those pesky leaks...only to create a new one when you plug another one up, it's time to check the crankcase pressure and rectify that if needed. Most of the leaks will subside. The ones that don't need to be addressed, as you are doing. Keep it up!
|