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Oil Catch Can, Eliminate that knock!

Discussion in 'Gen 3 Prius Care, Maintenance & Troubleshooting' started by danlatu, May 22, 2017.

  1. ChapmanF

    ChapmanF Senior Member

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    That'd snarl up the two-way traffic. The valve-cover vent is filtered air from the air cleaner being admitted into the crankcase in order to help flush blowby gases out through the PCV hose.

    The only exception is under WOT conditions, when the vacuum difference between the two ports is so small that, just during those conditions, flow in the breather hose reverses so both hoses then flow from the crankcase.

    -Chap
     
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  2. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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    This is good stuff, Dan.

    My car developed a hesitation the last several weeks at 168k miles that I knew was misfiring. A week ago, it got worse during a local drive, and the check engine light came on for Cylinder 3 misfire. I parked the car at home until I had time to pull off the intake manifold. Meanwhile, I gave myself a scare by thinking that my coolant level was down - misfiring coinciding with losing coolant = blown head gasket. Thank goodness I was just seeing the difference between the cold coolant level, which I don't usually see, with the warm coolant level that I usually notice when I check fluid levels at every gasoline fill up. I had already gotten a quote for head gasket replacement from Luscious (though I'm no longer close enough to visit them) to compare with local places/the dealer, and it was $7000+ including a new short block, which they said they typically recommended.

    When I took the intake manifold off the other night, there was enough oil below the throttle body that it totally soaked a sheet of paper towel - two tablespoons at minimum. The oil was wetting everything in there, including the entrances in the head. I had last cleaned the intake manifold 17k miles ago, so that's how much accumulated in 17k miles. There was minimal soot and sludge in the EGR passages because of that cleaning 17k miles ago. I also had a new EGR valve from the enhanced warranty (for insufficient EGR flow P0401 and associated misfiring) about 10k ago. There was less than 1 mm of new soot buildup in the EGR pipe. There was some oil, but no sludge in the tubing between the PCV valve and the intake manifold. That tube was sludgier 17k miles ago (when I also replaced the PCV valve). I'm convinced the oil is from the PCV valve.

    I was a bit apprehensive starting the car up today after putting things back together last night. If I really had an internal coolant leak, the misfiring might be worse if a head gasket leak was accelerating, like I was worried was a possibility after the last drive. I had thoughts of hydro lock after reading Dan's other thread. But it started up and ran pretty smoothly - better than it had since I started noticing hesitation several weeks ago. Though I noticed some questionable instances of hesitation, it might be some residual oil that I couldn't reach when I was cleaning. We'll see. The only thing that I really accomplished by taking off the intake this time besides inspection was to was clean oil out of it, so oil sitting in the intake manifold getting blown into the combustion chamber(s) was likely the cause of the misfiring.

    I'm going to order that Ruien OCC from Amazon (saw Dan's review of it there). Too bad I didn't have it on hand already, because I'll have to take things apart again to reach the PCV valve.

    Any ideas for how to mount the OCC? Like most people, I don't have a 3D printer. I'll probably end up improvising with zip ties.

    There's not much room at the U-shape hose. There's the vacuum switching valve and mount there, and coolant hoses going to the throttle body, and a larger coolant hose below that. But maybe you could route the hoses further down to the subframe by the engine mount there?
     
    #62 Lightning Racer, May 26, 2017
    Last edited: May 26, 2017
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  3. danlatu

    danlatu Senior Member

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    Thank you for sharing lightning, These are the problems I am talking about. Lighting lives in Alaska? That is a cold climate and I'm sure there is a lot of moisture in your crankcase. Did you find a white milky oily residue in the bottom of your throttle body? You found 2 tablespoons of oil in the manifold like i did here in Maryland. How many cold start knocks have you experienced lighting? Was the hesitation a stall?

    Imagine the engine running, the oil/fuel/water(condensation) makes it's way coating the entire intake plenum going towards the combustion chamber. Then image the engine coming to a stop. Any oil in the intake plenum at the top of the crest will then bleed in two directions. 1. down onto the pistons 2. down into the bottom of the throttle body. If the oil level is higher than 2 tablespoons, the engine sucks it into the combustion chamber along with the oil that is resting on the pistons from the last engine shut off. The two pools of oil combine on start up causing the immediate knock. I believe there will always be oil is in this valley below the throttle body were the air has a hard time scooping up anything below the 2 tablespoons. The only reason I mention 2 tablespoons is because this is what everyone finds sitting below the throttle body. I see the oil catch can eliminating the majority of this wet oil. The last 17k miles from the 2010 prius you see a fairly clean throttle body/plenum when usually there would be a BP spill in there.

    I will admit I am far from done with this project. I ordered a spare valve cover and I will figure out a way to mount/add a pcv valve to it. I do plan on plugging the bottom pcv location. There will be no venting into the atmosphere in any way and I will comply with emission regulations and I will consult with an engine builder I know. I will be monitoring closely, driving up/down hills with 5k rpm pulls on clear hoses with a non vented catch system. This will be a trial and error, so please be patient. I do realize that if this is done wrong that I could damage my motor and I am doing this @ my own risk.

    Oil/fuel/water(condensation) sitting after engine shutdown circled in brown.
    Screen Shot 2017-05-26 at 8.15.40 AM.png
     
    #63 danlatu, May 26, 2017
    Last edited: May 26, 2017
  4. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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    I live in Alaska, but I bought the car in California last year. The past winter was its first in Alaska. The car is garaged (45 F minimum, 55 F typical in the garage in the winter). Away from home in the winter, it is sometimes parked in the cold for 2-4 hours at a time. It has never had cold start knocking.

    There was no white residue below the throttle body. It looked like all oil.

    When the hesitation happens, the engine keeps running, but I feel and hear an interruption in power. Stuttering is another good descriptor for what happens. When the car has it, the hesitation can happen at any throttle position - from idle to high. Typically, when it has happened, I soft foot the gas pedal to go to EV to try to interrupt it as much as possible, and go easy the rest of the way home. I once tried more power during a hesitation because that works for some people in the some of the knocking threads, but it didn't stop the hesitation. I don't know if the knocking in those threads are misfires. I know the hesitation that I have experienced in my car has been misfires because misfire codes pop up eventually.
     
    #64 Lightning Racer, May 26, 2017
    Last edited: May 26, 2017
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  5. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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  6. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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  7. mjoo

    mjoo Senior Member

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    I wonder if most of the oil in the intake problems are caused by the common issue of dealers overfilling the crankcase. Crankcase needs an odd number of quarts (4.2 if I recall) and I've read reports of dealers just adding 5 quarts at an oil change. With the PCV valve so low on the engine this could cause the oil-in-the-PCV problem. Even if the oil level does not reach the PCV with the extra 0.8 quart when the engine is cold, there will be frothing and foaming oil when the engine is ran - raising the level. Forcing the engine to burn oil will cause the rings to stick which will exacerbate the EGR system and start the whole cascade of problems...
     
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  8. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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    For the 17k mile period in my car that I described several posts up, where at least 2 tablespoons accumulated, it hasn't been over filled. I check the level every fill up (and after an oil change to verify).
     
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  9. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    Are you sure that will work?
    Venting from the valve cover is above the pistons. They already have pressure relief through the valves. The bottom of the crankcase. Holds pressure from below the pistons. I think if you seal off the bottom of the crankcase and vent only from the top, you will build up pressure inside the crankcase which can crack it.

    Or am I missing something? I admit that you've torn this engine down and I haven't, so you have a much better visual understanding than I do.
     
  10. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    Back a few decades PCV valves were just plugged into a rubber grommet in the valve cover, were they not? Maybe they were not as effective thus? I know I replaced a PCV valve on an 06 Civic recently, and it was a similar pain, below the intake manifold.
     
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  11. StarCaller

    StarCaller Senior Member

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    I ordered this one/
    [​IMG]
    same as the ruien/
    one HAS to remove the intake manifold or is there a different way to reach the short hose at the pcv valve?
     
  12. Mendel Leisk

    Mendel Leisk Senior Member

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    @NutzAboutBolts video, pinned in Maintenance Sub-Forum: he removes PCV valve from below, unclipping and shifting a hybrid circuit cable for better access.
     
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  13. danlatu

    danlatu Senior Member

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    The crankcase is not separated, it is connected through these ports circled in red . The crankcase would never crack from air pressure, the rubber seals would fail first causing a bad leak or spray. Most cars have the pcv valves on the valve cover because hot air rises. Screen Shot 2017-05-26 at 3.14.45 PM.png

    Pics of pcv valves on toyota valve covers courtesy of eBay. Screen Shot 2017-05-26 at 3.36.50 PM.png Screen Shot 2017-05-26 at 3.37.21 PM.png Screen Shot 2017-05-26 at 3.38.43 PM.png
     
    #73 danlatu, May 26, 2017
    Last edited: May 26, 2017
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  14. Rebound

    Rebound Senior Member

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    Ok, I see now. But I assume you would keep the OCC, because the oil can exit the engine as a vapor.
     
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  15. danlatu

    danlatu Senior Member

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    Yes and no. I have an oil catch system in my ridgeline and for the last year and half and has caught less than a teaspoon. I put it on at the same time I did the 2010 prius' catch can. I saw all these videos on the internet with tacoma's and prius' sucking down gobs of oil that I thought I would try it. The catch system will come off the ridgeline because I feel it does not do anything. It is a better designed system.

    I will only put a catch system on the valve cover pcv because I need to drive the prius in all conditions, power mode(hard 5k rpm pulls), cornering/slolomn, rain, high humidity, heat, and cold weather etc. Without properly testing this in all of these environments could cause major problems. That is why I said this will take time to test. I did not post my finding's of the oil catch can from the 2010 prius for a year and a half, I wanted to make sure my findings were solid until I posted. I am not reckless with what I am doing. If anyone here would like to do the valve cover/pcv mod and report back, it would only be doing the community a great service. If the system works well enough an oil catch should mot be needed. The more people who participate, the better results we will have. Just know that you are taking a risk.
     
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  16. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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    Here's an update. The misfiring continues after cleaning the oil out of the intake. I guess that makes sense, because lower mileage cars also have oil in the intake, and they mostly don't misfire even though they are probably combusting some of that oil after about 20k miles.

    I pulled out the wiper tray and cowl (not too bad a chore, removal took 24 minutes using hand tools, my first time) and checked spark plug #3, where the misfire was occurring. The spark plugs had been changed at 151k miles (only 17k miles ago) by Luscious Garage using the original Denso SC20HR11. The spark plug was not fouled, and looked OK to me. The gap measured 1.0 mm, which is in spec (1.0-1.1 mm new, max 1.3 mm). I swapped it with the spark plug in cylinder 1 (gap was a bit under at 0.975 mm... close enough I guess - not supposed to adjust them?). I also swapped the coil from cylinder 3 with the one in cylinder 2. I then cleared the check engine code.

    Today, the misfire is P0301, so the misfire followed the spark plug to Cylinder 1. I'll either change that one plug, or just swap out all 4 again. Looking at old threads, it looked like maybe the spark plug was superseded by a hotter plug, the Denso SC16HR11, but I couldn't verify that. I did see interest in the threads for the Denso Iridium TT. I looked that up, and the one that fits the 3rd Gen Prius (IXEH20TT) is only $7 on Amazon, so I might go that way.

    Here's a question for you guys. The misfires that knock are detonations, right? So those are bad, and can damage the engine and head gasket. How about the quiet hesitation misfires that I've experienced? Are they likely harmless long term? I'm asking because I'm considering selling my car after fixing the misfire problem, due to fear of head gasket failure.

    A head gasket failure would cost way more than any gas I would save with this car. In fact, my first choices when shopping last time were Subarus (I have a reliable old one, not prone to head gasket failure with the EJ22 engine), but I was put off by potential for head gasket issues for the used ones that I was looking at. At least they cost less to fix than an engine swap or head gasket repair on the Prius. On the other hand, if my Prius, which has had good care, is likely to go 300K miles, I'll keep it.
     
    #76 Lightning Racer, May 31, 2017
    Last edited: May 31, 2017
  17. danlatu

    danlatu Senior Member

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    I am running the denso SC20HR11 with 0.044 gap. Your gap sounds like it's to small. Have you cleaned/flushed your fuel injectors? Mine had a lot carbon around them. Is your misfire @ startup only? Did you clean your egr cooler/valve/pipe and all the runner ports in the intake plenum? Make sure fuel/spark are squared away first and then check compression. If you have valves that are not seating from carbon build up, it will show up on a compression test. Make sure all plugs are in snug, I had a plug that appeared to be plugged in properly and threw a code/cel for cps/camshaft position sensor. I pushed it in harder and erased code and done.
    Subarus have head gasket issues as well, that is what stopped me from buying an frs. Waiting till I can buy one with a motor failure so I can get it cheap:) timing belt looks like a party i do not want to go to on those engines.
    Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 6.03.54 AM.png Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 5.59.38 AM.png
    Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 6.13.06 AM.png Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 6.10.55 AM.png
     
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  18. danlatu

    danlatu Senior Member

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    Yes detonation's are bad for the engine and will lead to an early head gasket failure. If your compression is off/not even with other cylinders, it can lead to an imbalance, vibration and uneven engine wear.
    Another thing. Clean your mas airflow sensor and your Map (air pressure manifold) sensors. My map was covered in heavy oil @ 297k

    Screen Shot 2017-05-31 at 7.05.51 AM.png
     
    #78 danlatu, May 31, 2017
    Last edited: May 31, 2017
  19. Lightning Racer

    Lightning Racer Active Member

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    I'll adjust the gaps when I go in again, but the plug that was misfiring was in spec at 1.0 mm. I was hesitant to adjust the gap in the other one because it wasn't misfiring and I remembered comments in previous threads that said not to adjust the gap. I'm not sure what the reasoning was. Maybe to not scratch up the tips? Carefully wedging them open slightly wider shouldn't damage anything.

    I haven't cleaned/flushed the fuel injectors. But I do have Techron in the current tank, and I also ran Techron in a tank about 10k miles ago. I have been using Top Tier gasoline. I'll look into the fuel injectors next if the spark plug doesn't fix the misfire. I watched some fuel injector testing videos on Youtube last night. Learned about listening to them with a screwdriver, and some other things.

    The EGR valve was new from about 10k miles ago. It was fixed under the enhanced warranty for P0401, insufficient EGR flow. I think they cleaned the EGR cooler then too, though I'm not sure. That EGR replacement fixed the previous misfiring the car had experienced after popping that P0401, and it had been good again until now. The EGR pipe and ports in the intake are 100% clean as of last week.

    All the used Subarus I looked at before buying the Prius were suspect for head gaskets. The turbo Subarus don't have head gasket issues, but are even risker used... lots of blown motors, and cars driven really hard. If I can find a nice ~100K mile 2007 Legacy or Outback wagon with the head gasket already replaced, I might sell the Prius for it. My 1996 Subaru is nicer to drive in terms of handling than the Prius... too bad it's rusting and has had the dash chewed up by my GF's dog. I like Hondas too, though they haven't had a wagon or hatchback (on the used market) the size of a Prius or larger in a while. Maybe the Fit is big enough for me though. Too bad you can't do engine swaps easily in the Prius. It's amazing the engine swaps you can do to a Civic or Insight. Here's an Insight with a 438 WHP and AWD:

     
  20. Former Member 68813

    Former Member 68813 Senior Member

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    The answer is no. The only reason misfire sounds like a knock in Prius is due to electric motors kicking in in the instance of misfire.

    You
    should be able to test spark plugs with good multimeter. There should be infinite resistance in the MegaOhm range. My experience is fancy iridium plugs are irreversibly damaged when flooded and register 1-2 MOhm despite cleaning. It happened to me many times in my boat before I wised up and put old OEM copper plugs in.


    Sounds like you should do the EGR cooler cleaning. Doubt dealer did that for you. They don't clean, they swap parts.
     
    #80 Former Member 68813, May 31, 2017
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