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Catch can proof

Stormtrooper1320

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#21

HRJ

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#22
it's keeping oil from getting in the S/C system.
Is that a bad thing, though?
 


Marc W

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#23
My take is this..... while a little bit of oil getting into the intake isn’t going to be a disaster, a can isn’t going to hurt and it’s a good way of assessing your motor. A tight motor that has a good seal around those oil galleys in the cylinder head is going to see almost no oil at all in a can. If you have increased your boost with pulleys and you don’t have a good seal there, then you’re pressurizing your crank case and a can is a good way to check that. I have one of these...... 259C51A9-EB32-4169-9C48-F45DD5547ACB.jpeg 7B44DE8A-1DF3-4179-87D0-B5E81C1F02DA.jpeg 974E6D00-E9F0-4EDC-8CAB-EC128A9D8A3D.jpeg
 


SilverBillet

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#24
A loose motor revs faster. Oil in the catch can doesn’t mean the rings aren’t seating?
 


Hellcatcfp

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#25
Why does this happen with the 6.2? The 6.2 is port injection vs direct injection...so I'm assuming it is somewhat normal? I agree that it cannot hurt to keep things clean with oil catch can.
 


Marc W

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#26
A loose motor revs faster. Oil in the catch can doesn’t mean the rings aren’t seating?
I didn’t say it was rings. The cylinder head uses o-ring intake gaskets and the ring around the oil galley is known to be commonly compromised. That oil galley leads to the crankcase. Engines that see a lot of oil in a catch can, most likely have a problem there.
 


Mean Cat

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#27
That's where I think the FI spacers can help that issue ^^^.
I don't get that much oil in my CC , maybe 1 tea spoon but I still would not run with out it.
 


Mean Cat

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#28
Is that a bad thing, though?
I don't think it's catastrophic , but I don't think it's a good thing , if your car is 1 of the ones that get a lot oil in the Hellcat S/C system or intake system on NA cars ?.... then it could lower your effective octane level when it's trying to reburn that. Not to mention a oily mess inside those systems too.
I just don't see the down side to using a CC.
 


SilverBillet

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#29
I didn’t say it was rings. The cylinder head uses o-ring intake gaskets and the ring around the oil galley is known to be commonly compromised. That oil galley leads to the crankcase. Engines that see a lot of oil in a catch can, most likely have a problem there.
I guess I need to replace them on my 5.7 because there is some oil accumulation on the top edge of the heads between the intake and valve covers. I guess it’s to be expected after 137,000 miles!
 


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