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snwtoy wrote:fivebob, I'm quite prepared to eat humble pie, I don't mind learning something new, ever.
Please explain to me the test I should perform to prove that there is a connection between the bov outlet chamber, and the rest of the airbox.
To date I have performed:
Visual test
Touch/feel test
Fluid leak test
Each of these tests have given no indication whatsoever of a connection between the two chambers.
The only outlet to the chamber into which the BOV vents is to the throttle bypass/speed control/whatever that line is called as per my diagram above.
If there is some other semi-permeable membrane involved which will pass air but not fluid, then that is the only other possibility I have not considered.
snwtoy wrote:Fivebob - I have just found a rubbery gasket/sealant running around the inside of the joint in the mouldings of the airbox lid
Is it possible that yours doesn't have this seal and as such vents air into the top of the larger chamber?
snwtoy wrote:Fivebob - I have just found a rubbery gasket/sealant running around the inside of the joint in the mouldings of the airbox lid
Is it possible that yours doesn't have this seal and as such vents air into the top of the larger chamber?
rodstr wrote:i found a little hole just behind the arrow
snwtoy wrote:Assuming I get rid of the black sh*t and it doesn't go into the motor, if I disconnect the bov, and filter the hole where the bov is connected is this going to allow unfiltered air into the engine?
snwtoy wrote:Can someone describe for me the moment there is enough negative pressure to open the bov for the bypass function fivebob describes? And explain if this is by design why there are no aparent issues with adding an aftermarket valve which will not open under negative pressure?
snwtoy wrote:It would seem that the 'one way' valve is actually a variable restriction valve - it restricts airflow in both directions, but it restricts a lot more in one direction than the other. Positive pressure toward (B) is restricted more than negative pressure. This means that chamber (B) is happy to go negative and close the valve, but only reluctantly helps to help open the valve.
fivebob wrote:I think it's the opposite to what you describe, i.e. it restricts vacuum more than boost, so that it both opens and closes the BOV faster. I'll check when I'm at my workshop this afternoon to make sure.
BTW the offical acronym for this device is a VTV (Vacuum Transmitting Valve) and it's an expensive piece of plastic for it's size as several US MR2 owners have found out when Toyota quoted them $US40 for a new one
snwtoy wrote:fivebob wrote:I think it's the opposite to what you describe, i.e. it restricts vacuum more than boost, so that it both opens and closes the BOV faster. I'll check when I'm at my workshop this afternoon to make sure.
BTW the offical acronym for this device is a VTV (Vacuum Transmitting Valve) and it's an expensive piece of plastic for it's size as several US MR2 owners have found out when Toyota quoted them $US40 for a new one
If that is the case I may have re-installed it backwards.
Can you confirm whether I need the purple side facing the bov, or the black side?
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