Dantheman1540
Full Access Member
There should be nothing in that circuit to filter out. The tube on the passenger side valve cover is a fresh air intake that draws it from the engine air intake tube. The circuit that has oily air in it is the port on the rear of the driver's side valve cover. There's a hose that runs from there to the top middle of the intake manifold. This air flows opposite of the one on the passenger side- the air flows OUT of the engine and into the intake manifold. You want to run a hose from the port on the valve cover to the inlet of the catch can, then from the outlet of the catch can to the port on the intake manifold. BE CAREFUL with the fitting on the intake manifold! It's plastic and will break very easily if you bend or twist it too much. I use a razor knife to slice the plastic hose on it lengthwise and peel it off. Then brace the fitting with my hand while I push on the rubber hose onto it, using a little lube to help it slide.
That's interesting I didn't know there was a fresh air intake for the valve covers. Seems to me it ends up being a second source of oil in the intake as the hose was full of oil when I removed it. I was planning to connect both sides to the can and eliminating the port on the top of the intake and having them both run back to the intake tube.
If one side is for fresh air then why do most people vent both valve covers to a single can then back to the intake? My Silverado has dual -10an to a single can then -10 back to the intake but also has the ability to vent to the atmosphere under heavy boost.
I will be extra gentle with that fitting I love old crumbly plastics.