Originally Posted by
mongo_tuned That sounds like it'd suck quite a lot,For some reason I laughed.
Originally Posted by
mongo_tuned would it have too much vacuum or not?No way. An electric pump isn't going to ever draw enough power to create too much vacuum. The belt driven pumps can if done incorrectly and obviously the engine itself creates way too much vacuum to apply to the crank case unrestricted, but the electric pumps are going to be strong enough to get the job done well while also being weak enough to avoid having to worry about over-scavenging oil or the crank case.
Originally Posted by
mongo_tuned Also could you run the pump continuously or would it have to be turned off for a while?From what I'm reading most of these cheaper pumps are taken from cars where they were used to inject fresh air into the exhaust stream for emissions reasons. The pumps are not designed to run continuously but some people have done it with success. Also most of these pumps have sound deadening foam inside you will want to remove to prevent overheating of the pump. Most people run the pump only during WOT or have them set with a pressure switch to turn on at 1 or 2 psi in the case of turbo engines. I'd rather see the pump on more than that, but obviously if you employ one of these control schemes for the pump (to prevent running it continuously) you'll want to retain the PCV valve and plumbing.
Originally Posted by
mongo_tuned Ben in you're diagrams on the first page you still have the pcv line connected to the plenum with the air pump, could you not get rid of this with the pump?See above. If you run the bump continuously you can remove the PCV side of things too. If you only run it at WOT or in boost or something like that then you'll still want the PCV side of things to remain to get the job done during idle and cruising.