[TR] TR4 engine rebuild/rear seal

Brian Induni 308gtsi at roadrunner.com
Wed Feb 20 09:21:05 MST 2008


Randall,
I'm wondering if this inadequate ventilation is the reason why my 4a engine
revs increase when I take the oil filler cap off. Long story, but my valves
make a lot of noise and I took the cap off while the engine was running to
see if there was oil being pumped to the head. As soon as I took the cap
off, the engine revs increased about 200-300 rpms. I know the (dare I say)
PVC valve is working and all passages are open to and from it. And I should
mention I rebuild the engine from a bare block (hot tanked, magnafluxed
(sp?), the works) I know all is up to pare.
Has anyone tried this new and improved ventilation? If so, any pictures of
what it looks like??

Brian


------------------------------

Message: 5
Date: Tue, 19 Feb 2008 15:31:59 -0800
From: "Randall" <tr3driver at ca.rr.com>
Subject: Re: [TR] TR4 engine rebuild/rear seal
To: "'Lee&John Howard'" <leejohn7 at gmail.com>, "'triumph list list'"
	<triumphs at autox.team.net>
Message-ID: <115f01c8734f$9f7d0380$6a5636cc at jdnet.deere.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"

> It occurs to me that venting fumes to the atmosphere is 
> contrary to the
> spirit if not the letter of the emmissions rules for these old cars.

If that bothers you, you could add a PCV valve to suck fumes from the rocker
cover when there is manifold vacuum (which is most of the time); and bring
the large vent hole in the side of the block out and up to an air filter
with large diameter tubing.  That will give you a proper Positive Crankcase
Ventilation system (which IMO Triumph never did get right).  This is the
configuration used by virtually all American cars.

Under cruise conditions, the fumes are sucked through the valve into the
intake manifold and burned, while the filter admits fresh air into the
crankcase.  Then at WOT (where blowby is maximum but no manifold vacuum and
hence no flow through the PCV valve), the fumes go out the other way,
backwards through the filter into the atmosphere.  But the large diameter
tubing (and hopefully free-flowing filter) prevent pressure buildup in the
crankcase (which I agree is one of the major reasons these engines leak oil,
both at the rear seal and at the rocker cover gasket).  

All this is theory though, I haven't tried it myself yet.  But after reading
up a bit on how much gunk goes into the air from the road draft tube; I will
be adding this to my project TR3.  It should also help the engine last a
little longer, by reducing varnish buildup from condensing blowby, and by
reducing dirt sprayed into the road draft tube by occasional off-road
excursions (both intentional and unintentional).

Likely you will need to disconnect and plug the PCV valve while setting
mixture.

Randall


More information about the Triumphs mailing list