Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Posted

The air separators from an air compressor only trap a small amount. And for any brand, really need to do a test as laid out to see first hand. If you get one of the truely effective units (yes, I still come back to the ELite E2-X as it is the one shown to outerform all others in the dozens and dozens we have tested) then most all is trapped and the issue is not an issue any longer. The first empty when you add the E2-X will be a greater amount than the subsequent generally as your now evacuating at all times so your removing much of what had already accumulated in the crankcase. As far as using a can that the test results have not been done, or one with only one exit port, you are goinf to see issues in the future as the GDI engine is far diffeferent than the port injection engines of the past.

 

Then, I have covered the use of seafoam and similar solvent based cleaners and unless used right from the start before the deposits form enough to cause damage when you use them, you will have scouring to the pistons and cylinder walls as well as other potential damage. If used in conjunction with say the E2X system, they will help maintain deposit free valves for the life of the engine.

Posted (edited)

Not that the E2-X isn't but, it looks like the ADD W1 is fully serviceable and it appears guys have had great success with them. At only 1500 miles and a CRC/Seafoam regimen is still recommended, the ADD looks like a inexpensive alternative to the E2-X. Do you guys cut the existing pcv connectors off of the factory pcv tube and reuse them for the catch can?

Edited by Willshire
Posted

I have the e2x and it is fully serviceable. All the internal components can be accessed and cleaned. It is a professional grade part. I am amazed of how much it collects.

Posted

I have the e2x and it is fully serviceable. All the internal components can be accessed and cleaned. It is a professional grade part. I am amazed of how much it collects.

It's serviceable but not without completely removing it and you can't see the inside of the can. But yes you can spray carbeurator cleaner inside and shake it up and then rinse it out.

 

 

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Posted (edited)

It's serviceable but not without completely removing it and you can't see the inside of the can. But yes you can spray carbeurator cleaner inside and shake it up and then rinse it out.

Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Should we be doing this to our Elite catch cans every so often? Edited by mjj
Posted

Should we be doing this to our Elite catch cans every so often?

I would think we should be checking the media for buildup but, since it doesn't see the heat the back of the valves do i can't see the oil and water bonding to the media very much. A check once in a while is just good maintenance

Posted (edited)

I have the e2x and it is fully serviceable. All the internal components can be accessed and cleaned. It is a professional grade part. I am amazed of how much it collects.

Not doubting the effectiveness of this can at all. As a matter of fact it looks very well engineered. But with the CDN dollar in the crapper, this is an almost $500 dollar part.

 

Put straight pipes on it and use a crankcase evacuation kit! LOL

Edited by Willshire
Posted

Not that the E2-X isn't but, it looks like the ADD W1 is fully serviceable and it appears guys have had great success with them. At only 1500 miles and a CRC/Seafoam regimen is still recommended, the ADD looks like a inexpensive alternative to the E2-X. Do you guys cut the existing pcv connectors off of the factory pcv tube and reuse them for the catch can?

And it is for a port injection engine, but GDI cannot tolerate any oil ingestion, so that is what the owner needs to take into consideration. Running a can that only traps say 30-50% of the oil mix entering will help some, but still result in coking. When you take into consideration the added MPG the E2-X gives, it is a no brainer. But everyone is free to install what they choose. I can only pass on actual testing results and there are not many that can come close to the E2-X, and none to date that exceed it.

 

On cleaning, they should not need to be cleaned. All Elite are billet threaded and O-ringed to be able to service, but again, in testing any of the cans rarely did any need to be cleaned no matter the brand. If they operated inside the engine where temps are high enough then residue would bake onto the internals, but as all cans cool the vapors substantially, none need to be cleaned except at say 50k mile intervals just for maintenance if desired. The longest test we have done is 63,000 miles and on inspection very little actual build up was anywhere internally.

 

jsdirt, AMEN to that statement!

Posted

What ever happened to the old days of sucking water into the intake via manifold vacuum and steam cleaning the valves? Those days were awesome!

Posted

What ever happened to the old days of sucking water into the intake via manifold vacuum and steam cleaning the valves? Those days were awesome!

 

You would never really clean the tops of the valves by doing this...even in the old days. This method of water injection just cleans inside the cylinder. so the backs of the valves might get cleaned, but the issue still remains with the tops sides of the valves.

Posted

 

You would never really clean the tops of the valves by doing this...even in the old days. This method of water injection just cleans inside the cylinder. so the backs of the valves might get cleaned, but the issue still remains with the tops sides of the valves.

i just figured water droplets rushing in to a 350 degree valve (assumption on temp as i know the valves are hotter than the coolant.) would turn the droplets into steam just as they were approaching the valve. I'm not an engineer so this is pure speculation.

Posted

Physics forums:

Water does a nice job decarboning the piston/cylinder area but has virtually no effect on the intake side of the intake valve or EGR passages and that is where the majority of carbon build up happens. This is much more of a problem in direct injection engines. The PCV system functions to recycle combustion blow-by through the intake. It builds up on the intake valve where the venture effect causes low pressure and the combustion contaminants condense out and adhere to the valve head. This requires chemical or mechanical removal and can not be removed with water. You can decarbon part of your engine with water, but you are treating the part of the engine least affected by carbon buildup.

Reference https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/decarbonizing-an-engine-with-water-myth-or-fact.793344/page-2

  • Like 1
Posted

Physics forums:

Water does a nice job decarboning the piston/cylinder area but has virtually no effect on the intake side of the intake valve or EGR passages and that is where the majority of carbon build up happens. This is much more of a problem in direct injection engines. The PCV system functions to recycle combustion blow-by through the intake. It builds up on the intake valve where the venture effect causes low pressure and the combustion contaminants condense out and adhere to the valve head. This requires chemical or mechanical removal and can not be removed with water. You can decarbon part of your engine with water, but you are treating the part of the engine least affected by carbon buildup.

 

Reference https://www.physicsforums.com/threads/decarbonizing-an-engine-with-water-myth-or-fact.793344/page-2

 

yep, pretty much exactly what I was getting at.

Posted

Looks like a BG style cleaning every so often (15k) is warranted anyways. I pity the guy down the hall from me that has 50k miles on his silverado and these things don't even ponder with him. He's a 3-4 year turn and burn guy anyway LOL

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now

  • Latest Articles

  • Posts

    • I would have to read back to get a better picture in my mind of some of the other comments and what they were using for a driving scenario they based the fuel mileage off of. That is why the fuel mileage conversation is extremely difficult to make fair comparisons from. If I was to be living in town and only driving around town, light to light and some longer stretches that doesn't have a light every block, and the usual stop at a grocery store and the bank and so on and so forth, my fuel mileage even during the summer time would be so bad with my truck I don't even want to know how bad it would be !. Then add in winter time and idling to warm it up to clear the windows and driving through snowy streets etc, large heavy trucks with gas engines have NEVER been worth crap for fuel mileage and why some little pot licker of a car with wheelbarrow tires and a 1300 cc four cylinder non turbo engine was the ticket to using a mere fraction of the fuel over a full size pickup.    By the way my truck has the 34" tires as its a HC but not the BFG KO3 tires ( that was an option for my truck but the sales guy couldn't figure out what the tires actually were so that never got on the order until it was too late to change the truck order ). So what fuel mileage your getting actually sounds good for "town driving" and with my truck when I go to town the fuel mileage keeps increasing as I get closer to town because it takes quite a while to get the driveline oils warmed up ( and why it always shows better fuel mileage on the return trip from town because its already warmed up ) but once I am in town that fuel mileage average just keeps dropping the more I mess around town and then has to recover back to something reasonable again by the time I get home for an over all average.    I'd be curious what your sticker says for the factory weight of your truck, mine is close around that 7700 lb due to the options it has. But anyway the long and short is, vehicle weight, higher rolling resistance heavy tires and a hefty driveline and a relatively large gas engine make for crap fuel mileage in stop and go scenarios, all one can do is drive it easy off the line at each stop and as my dad had said over the years, drive like a raw egg is under your foot and that's the best one can do. Years back with a carbed engine and if the carb was getting a bit out of tune etc as would the ignition system, the fuel mileage on pickups with larger engines was just awful compared to what your getting. We pay the fuel price penalty for driving HD trucks over some little vehicle, that is the reality. 
    • We had two Toyota’s with that engine in the mid 80s. We had 50 gallon fuel tanks, a toolbox full of tools, an air compressor and assorted parts for our equipment. We beat those up and down pipeline ROWs until we started buying diesel trucks. Then they became parts runners and first vehicles for our teenagers first cars. Our shop Forman wrecked them both two years apart when we hired him out of high school as an apprentice. Good thing he’s an excellent mechanic. It took awhile before he could be called a good driver.
    • I have a 2025 GMC Canyon Denali.   On a trip recently the engine failed.  The dealership diagnosed a bent valve and says there is a service bulletin that indicates to 'relace the engine'.  The truck only has about 14K miles and is under warranty.   The failure occurred 5/11/2026.   So far I have worked with GM Customer Assistance and Roadside Assistance.  Evidently no engines are available and nobody will offer a date when a new one will be.   Coming up on two months with no repair or timeline and no loaner from the dealership.   GMC Customer Assistance is 'ghosting' me and keeps closing the cases I've opened with no resolution.   Hoping someone can help me on how to escalate this issue.
  • GM-Trucks.com Clubs

  • Popular Contributors

×
×
  • Create New...