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<2002> Oil venting containers
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Subject: <2002> Oil venting containers
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From: "Matt R. Brumwell" <mbrumwell@domain.elided>
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Date: Tue, 17 Sep 1996 11:50:58 -0500
Mike asked about crank case and tranny venting on a 2002.
I have DCOE's on my car also and had the same problem. I ran the breather hose over to
the drivers side firewall where the emission relay junk use to be. On the firewall,
using a carefully bent coat hanger as a bracket, I have a plastic Peter Pan Peanut
Butter jar (18 oz I think). I found a rubber 90 deg elbow in the Help! display at the
local Auto Value. One end is a male end that fits inside the breather hose. The other
end is female and has a grove molded into it to it will hold itself in place when pushed
through a hole in the plactic jar. On the inside of the jar I have a K & N stubby
filter. This filter has a male end on it which connects to the elbow. Around the top
of the jar I drilled a series of 1/8" holes to allow air to escape. I use a large wire
tie to hold the jar in the bracket firmly. My theory is that the oil vapor will
condense in the filter element and drip into the bottom of the jar. The 'clean'
air goes through the holes in the top of the jar. After 600 miles there is a little oil
in the bottom of the jar, and no oil on the outside lid of the jar. Seems to work for
me.
The transmission venting article was in the August 1994 issue of European Car, just
happened to be on the top of the stack on the work bench :).
The gist of the article is this. If the vent gets plugged the tranny does its breathing
throught the seals. Not good since it can suck dirt in during cool down. The vent plug
(according to EC) can be pulled out from the top with vise grips, making sure the area
around it is clean. My tranny was out so this was easy. Once its out put it in a vise.
If you are running Webers and still have your old intake manifold, you should be able to
find a threaded nipple that will work. If not, go back to Auto Value and they have a
selection of brass nipples. Drill a hole in the vent plug and then tap threads in it to
match the nipple. File the top of the plug flat so there is a good mating surface
between the plug and the nipple. A copper washer is needed if you use the manifold
nipple. Put teflon tape or other sealer on the threads and screw the two together.
I used blue brake hose and ran it up to its own catch bottle next to the crankcase
bottle. In theory the same bottle can be used for both, but the bottle would have to be
large enough for both to come in independently. I though about putting a T in the
crankcase breather hose, but decided I didn't want Motor oil in the tranny and vice
versa. Anyway, the bottle arrangement is similiar, using a brass elbow and I think a
small fuel filter inside the bottle. The jar itself is a small jar designed to hang on
a peg board.
I also put a overflow bottle in for the radiator. I used a commercial $12 kit and
installed it where the battery use to be. Works great.
I hope this helps.
matt brumwell
smoky mountain chapter 'cca
'75 2002 '87 535is '88 M3