Looks like it will work a lot better. Given your fabrication skills it'd probably be a good idea to build some sort of protection for that hose. Would suck to drive over something and damage it as you'd be out of oil in no time. I drove over a chunk of frozen snow once in my old Dodge van. It managed to snap the vent tube off the top of the rear axle. End result was a lot of winter sandy salty slushy water getting in to the axle and chewing up the gears within about 200km.Sent from my HTC One XL using Tapatalk
As it is, I think I will add a steel brace from the block to the tab I have on the exhaust flange I made. It would be designed to parallel the drain hose and protect it from getting caught on something. A big chunk of re-tread flipping up and catching it would take it out in a hurry.
...BTW your Bieber avatar is awesome.-Malone
When doing drainage in another lifetime the leader of the crew would always say "if you have a 4" pipe sitting level you have 4" of fall." While I see his point, the liquid will not fill one end of the pipe completely then continue to the other side before draining, it will not evacuate as fast as a pipe that has good fall. I guess my point is you should be fine.Also, it won't matter what the pump can put out as much as if you have a 10mm feed or the smallest hole in the feed line will limit it. You should be able to figure 10mm or whatever size by the length of the line and pressure to get you a volume of oil you need to get rid of. The 5/8 should take care of it.
Unless. . .
A turbo can be mounted at the oil level. The drain should feed above the oil level in the sump to avoid hydraulic back-pressure, but because the oil is pressure fed, the return can flow slightly uphill. If the return line is too large in diameter, the crankcase pressure might overcome the feed pressure. Back to the boost controller: why would you make it so complicated? The excess pressure doesn't need to feed back into the intake. It could much easier vent to atmosphere. I've attached a (crude) diagram of basically what I've built. I haven't tested it in car, but I've tested it with compressed air, a regulator, and a couple gauges.
Quote from: JamesT on March 17, 2014, 11:07:11 pmA turbo can be mounted at the oil level. The drain should feed above the oil level in the sump to avoid hydraulic back-pressure, but because the oil is pressure fed, the return can flow slightly uphill. If the return line is too large in diameter, the crankcase pressure might overcome the feed pressure. ah, that is clever.
A turbo can be mounted at the oil level. The drain should feed above the oil level in the sump to avoid hydraulic back-pressure, but because the oil is pressure fed, the return can flow slightly uphill. If the return line is too large in diameter, the crankcase pressure might overcome the feed pressure.
In my admittedly limited understanding, part of the reason for the >30* fall requirement and relatively large drain tubes is not only are you evacuating hot oil, but it can significantly foamed, adding to backup of the tube. conceivably you could build a small de aeration chamber with an anti slosh baffle that bolts to the unused motor mount spot just above your existing fitting.I'm starting to wonder if this is why the Bank$ setup on my 6.2 pukes oil out the turbo under load, it has to drain through the lift pump drainback hole.