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Guest
Guest
The rotating mass and heat builds pressure in the crankcase which must be vented.When using a positive crankcase ventilation system (PCV) with a catch can,the catch can, can be put under a vacuum using a T fitting between the carb filters, or intake boots, to create a slight vacuum in the crankcase through the hose connected to the engine's vent fitting.Race engines have been using this set up for a very long time.My racing karts used the same set up.Very simple system to help the engine run a little better and cleaner.
Rotating components won't produce pressure, only turbulence. Granted, the crankcase air will expand once as it heats up. But there won't be any suction in there unless you tap into the intake vacuum, which is what the PCV does. PCVs are nice, and they don't upset the mixture significantly because the blowby gasses are just CO2. The slight vacuum you mention is there in theory, but it only exists if the PCV can keep ahead of the blowby rate. When the system reverses, the gasses have to go somewhere else and many automotive designs end up soaking the paper air filter or spewing sooty crap on the throttle body.
I just wanted to point out that the GS motors don't wheeze in and out like Harleys and British twins do. Nothing is going to get sucked into the breather unless you create suction.
