That's interesting about the metered vac line - I'm guessing it has an orifice in it somewhere to limit the flow. I don't know if anyone here has got into diesel engines - but diesels (because they have no engine vacuum) have a vacuum pump as an accessory and usually a small vacuum reservoir that could, maybe, be added to the metered line but I doubt it would make a noticeable difference to the accessories.
anyway~
Gasoline/petrol when it burns in the engine does in fact produce (for one thing) sulphuric acid, and that is horrible for engine bearings and valve guides. If any of you are in Southern California - do NOT be lured into buying fuel in Tiajuana because of the price, Mexican gas (PEMEX) is notoriously high in sulphur, and low in octane. You can destroy an engine with it if you use that.
I should know, I lived in San Diego for a long time, and watched my Dad kill several cars with it. One of them was a classic 1961 Desoto
A point of advice that I have from Old School (read: Ancient) auto mechanics is that you can run a pint of DIESEL FUEL in your oil before changing it, for maybe ten minutes or so. This will eat up sludge, loosen it, and flush out a lot of stuff - but NEVER run it in the oil system continuously.
One of the first things we do (my buddies and I) when we get a car or truck that shows signs of a lot of crud in the valve cover is to pull the drain plug, pour diesel into the valve cover, and let it run right out the bottom. THEN we run the pint of diesel in fresh oil for ten minutes, and drain the whole works out. The oil filter is trashed at this point too...
The next oil change after that is in about one day at the most - by then a good detergent oil should have carried most of the crud into the oil filter. The filter, of course, is instantly trashed once again. You can watch it to check the color and viscosity - but as a rule what you are doing is rinsing out the old built up crap in it.
The valve cover itself, and the top of the head collect a lot of junk that you want to scrape out or clean out however you can. For the inside of the valve cover - OVEN CLEANER works very well and is cheap. Just make sure you hose it out completely.
What the "Instant Tune-up In A Can" people are not telling you, is that they really haven't much improved their product over what can be done with a shot of kerosene or diesel oil
But I will guarantee you this! The reason a lot of built up crud is in there to begin with is because the PCV system wasn't doing it's job - and that is why you want to make sure you have a good one.
Also do a compression check as SOON as you bring a used vehicle home. It will tell you more than an analyser could.
If the basic mechanical system itself is bad, you got trouble. Expensive trouble.
But if it isn't - the rest can be worked with.
~Wolfie
*PS: The very last thing on earth you want is for the oil lines to the cylinder head to get clogged. It will destroy the cam bearing surfaces, and I'm not sure they even have bearings - so it could cost you a remanned cylinder head to fix, along with a cam and everything else.
CRUD in an ENGINE is VERY BAD....
So anyway, you were asking why I thought the PCV system was important?
There you are.... :tm:
OH BY THE WAY!
The ONLY recommendation I have on oil for these is CASTROL 20W50
It's a wide range of protection for all seasons, but not too thin.
These are older engines, and not diesel. They are also higher revving and more efficient, smaller, and make more power out of less volume.
10W40 was made for winter conditions, 20W50 is what Jim Wolffe of Import Auto Center in El Cajon California used in all of the Datsun Z cars he worked on
~I gather he has become somewhat famous around there now...
anyway~
Gasoline/petrol when it burns in the engine does in fact produce (for one thing) sulphuric acid, and that is horrible for engine bearings and valve guides. If any of you are in Southern California - do NOT be lured into buying fuel in Tiajuana because of the price, Mexican gas (PEMEX) is notoriously high in sulphur, and low in octane. You can destroy an engine with it if you use that.
I should know, I lived in San Diego for a long time, and watched my Dad kill several cars with it. One of them was a classic 1961 Desoto
A point of advice that I have from Old School (read: Ancient) auto mechanics is that you can run a pint of DIESEL FUEL in your oil before changing it, for maybe ten minutes or so. This will eat up sludge, loosen it, and flush out a lot of stuff - but NEVER run it in the oil system continuously.
One of the first things we do (my buddies and I) when we get a car or truck that shows signs of a lot of crud in the valve cover is to pull the drain plug, pour diesel into the valve cover, and let it run right out the bottom. THEN we run the pint of diesel in fresh oil for ten minutes, and drain the whole works out. The oil filter is trashed at this point too...
The next oil change after that is in about one day at the most - by then a good detergent oil should have carried most of the crud into the oil filter. The filter, of course, is instantly trashed once again. You can watch it to check the color and viscosity - but as a rule what you are doing is rinsing out the old built up crap in it.
The valve cover itself, and the top of the head collect a lot of junk that you want to scrape out or clean out however you can. For the inside of the valve cover - OVEN CLEANER works very well and is cheap. Just make sure you hose it out completely.
What the "Instant Tune-up In A Can" people are not telling you, is that they really haven't much improved their product over what can be done with a shot of kerosene or diesel oil
But I will guarantee you this! The reason a lot of built up crud is in there to begin with is because the PCV system wasn't doing it's job - and that is why you want to make sure you have a good one.
Also do a compression check as SOON as you bring a used vehicle home. It will tell you more than an analyser could.
If the basic mechanical system itself is bad, you got trouble. Expensive trouble.
But if it isn't - the rest can be worked with.
~Wolfie
*PS: The very last thing on earth you want is for the oil lines to the cylinder head to get clogged. It will destroy the cam bearing surfaces, and I'm not sure they even have bearings - so it could cost you a remanned cylinder head to fix, along with a cam and everything else.
CRUD in an ENGINE is VERY BAD....
So anyway, you were asking why I thought the PCV system was important?
There you are.... :tm:
OH BY THE WAY!
The ONLY recommendation I have on oil for these is CASTROL 20W50
It's a wide range of protection for all seasons, but not too thin.
These are older engines, and not diesel. They are also higher revving and more efficient, smaller, and make more power out of less volume.
10W40 was made for winter conditions, 20W50 is what Jim Wolffe of Import Auto Center in El Cajon California used in all of the Datsun Z cars he worked on
~I gather he has become somewhat famous around there now...
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