G Winter
Well-known member
ok, by right you mean pass. side. Right ?
where does the PVC hose connect ? It should connect somewhere that has manifold vacuum. The vacuum through the PVC pulls air through the crankcase. The air goes into the crankcase on the other side. This is what is hooked to your the area on the throttle body you are concerned about.
If there has been a lot of down shifting done in the past or the PCV has not been working in some way. Such as plugged or even restricted in some way, then you would build up crankcase pressure. This could cause a little oil to be forced into that hose.Extremely hard driving will cause some crankase pressure. Ideally there shouldn't be oil in the area you are talking about.A small amount of oil can appear like a lot. Even a slight mist would condense in the top of the throttle body. I would clean it up, drive it for awhile and check it again.
The way to find out for sure would be to take a compression test. Personally I don't think you have a real problem. That oil may have accumulated over the life of the car.
An afterthought , at some time during the cars life the PCV may not have been working right and the oil could have been forced there at that time. It wouldn't likely go away by itself.
Glenn

where does the PVC hose connect ? It should connect somewhere that has manifold vacuum. The vacuum through the PVC pulls air through the crankcase. The air goes into the crankcase on the other side. This is what is hooked to your the area on the throttle body you are concerned about.
If there has been a lot of down shifting done in the past or the PCV has not been working in some way. Such as plugged or even restricted in some way, then you would build up crankcase pressure. This could cause a little oil to be forced into that hose.Extremely hard driving will cause some crankase pressure. Ideally there shouldn't be oil in the area you are talking about.A small amount of oil can appear like a lot. Even a slight mist would condense in the top of the throttle body. I would clean it up, drive it for awhile and check it again.
The way to find out for sure would be to take a compression test. Personally I don't think you have a real problem. That oil may have accumulated over the life of the car.
An afterthought , at some time during the cars life the PCV may not have been working right and the oil could have been forced there at that time. It wouldn't likely go away by itself.
Glenn




oil out the PCV inlet, drive it man !



