Yeah. TSI engines suffer from carbon buildup on the inlet valves from the oil. An F4R is an IDI (indirect injection) engine so sprays fuel onto the back of the inlet valves so you get a fuel, air and oil mix hitting the inlet valve
On a TSI they're direct injection like most diesels. So your air and oil hit the inlet valve but there's no petrol there to wash away any carbon stuck to the valve. Over time your inlet valves get so coked up that your engine just gives up on life
Yes mate, if you want a good vid to watch then this is the one for youAhhhhhh gotcha. I didn't even know that oil was chucked into the inlet valve! Thought was just fuel and air. Everyday's a learning day. so the catch can on a TSI is to stop/reduce the coking up over time?
Yes mate, if you want a good vid to watch then this is the one for you
This guy knows his s**t when it comes to VW's. He was some sort of master tech iirc. Properly knows his stuff though, right VW perv 😂
wow, that's oil?? looks very thin
wow, that's oil?? looks very thin
Oil vapour but most of that will be condensation/water.
Condensation in the catch can? Or that's all that gets chucked back into the engine?
Depends how worn your rings areHow much water/oil mix would you expect to empty out of the catch can on an F4R?
Depends on many factors, mileage, engine usage interval, type of driving done, engine health, forced induction or NA etc.How much water/oil mix would you expect to empty out of the catch can on an F4R?
On an FR4 engine do you cause any issues by venting to atmosphere through a catch tank, in that you lose the suction (PCV?) effect of having the vent pipe plugged into the intake.
Or is it best to route the pipe through the catch tank and back to the intake?
You'd bung the hole in the inlet. You can't feed it into the catchcan as it'll bypass the throttle body and have unrestricted air in the manifold.
A breaker we bought near 10 years ago did just that (not a Clio). "It revs like it has a mind of its own" lol.
Depends how worn your rings are
Depends on many factors, mileage, engine usage interval, type of driving done, engine health, forced induction or NA etc.
1000 miles of 20 mile journeys over 4 months in winter vs 1000 mile sprint across Europe over a few days would net a very different outcome.
So you have to lose the positive crankcase ventilation that sucks vapour out of the crank case if you use a catch tank?
If you just vent the tank to atmosphere, and bung the inlet hole of course, you no longer have any suction.
Does that in turn decrease the effectiveness of removing oil and water vapour from the crankcase?
I guess what I'm asking is:
Is the OEM vent routed back to the intake just to burn off the oily vapour just for some anti-pollution reason, or is it routed that way because the suction is needed to properly ventilate the engine?
So you have to lose the positive crankcase ventilation that sucks vapour out of the crank case if you use a catch tank?
If you just vent the tank to atmosphere, and bung the inlet hole of course, you no longer have any suction.
Does that in turn decrease the effectiveness of removing oil and water vapour from the crankcase?
I guess what I'm asking is:
Is the OEM vent routed back to the intake just to burn off the oily vapour just for some anti-pollution reason, or is it routed that way because the suction is needed to properly ventilate the engine?