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Re: PCV Valve/Drippy 1275

To: "Scott & Glenda Meyers" <autox@earthlink.net>
Subject: Re: PCV Valve/Drippy 1275
From: "Ron Soave" <redlotus@spacey.net>
Date: Sun, 13 Dec 1998 17:06:44 -0500
Cc: <spridgets@Autox.Team.Net>
Reply-to: "Ron Soave" <redlotus@spacey.net>
Sender: owner-spridgets@Autox.Team.Net
> For those of us who only 'kinda' paid attention to the other posts, would
you
> mid sharing in some detail how you hooked this up to your 1275?

Personally, I routed two hoses, one from the valve cover spigot and one
from the timing  cover into a "Y" fitting.  The "y" is then routed into the
valve, which I am using inline in heater hose (it is not an inline valve,
I'm just using it that way, it has pipe thread on one end, and a hose bead
on the other, 1/4 inch or 3/8 if memory serves, and it'll have to serve
since I'm too lazy to walk 9 feet to the garage).  From the PCV valve, it's
more heater hose into a 1/4" pipe-to-hose adapter fitting (90 angle) into
the intake of my Cannon manifold (no hole provided on the intake, just a
flat; drill and tap it yourself).  I did it this way for max PCV, and
routed it for esthetics.  It is very low profile, and I wire brushed and
clearcoted all the fittings to give a polished look.  Actually on my car, I
was pulling a bit too much vacuum with this valve on throttle lift, and was
seeing puffs of smoke, never on power or under load, just at "vacuum"
situations.  I feared it was guides (although they are new), but jetting
down the PCV with orifices has worked well.    


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