Or........CDR, anyone?
A dissertation on our much beloved yet oft confusing "the puck" for your various and sundry entertainment - open-puck pics to follow
Note: BARO is substituted herein for atmospheric pressure
The camshaft cover, or head cover, has two 1"dia ports on top right side near the rear, to which an oil-separator puck is mounted - rearmost port is unrestricted crankcase effluent, front port is also crankcase effluent, but is restricted by a ported baffle inside the oil separator housing - also erroneously called the CCV, but which is a simple crankcase depression regulator, or CDR , the Diesel version of the gasser's PCV Positive Crankcase Ventilation valve - both parts conform to the EPA-required Closed Crankcase Ventilation system
The oil slinger puck consists of a black thermo-plastic housing with a 1" port at the entrance of a snail-shaped scroll ending in a chamber which is open to the vacuum chamber above, and is also ported thru a small-area opening in the baffle above the second crankcase port - the centrifugal scroll is sealed by a thermo-plastic cover with a round puck-shaped vacuum chamber on top - a removeable round cover seals in-place a large-diameter rubber diaphragm with a small spring beneath held captive in the vacuum\exhaust port -
The 1"dia crankcase effluent port at the rear feeds the scroll, but the restriction in the second port at the center of the scroll reduces crankcase effluent thru that 1" port, which then serves as the oil drain-back port from the center of the scroll chamber - returned oil is denser than crankcase effluent
In the center of the round vacuum chamber is a raised 1/2"dia exhaust port, separate from the scroll port, leading to a 3/4"dia hose barb for the hose from the compressor intake duct
The diaphragm serves as a vacuum-operated valve on the exhaust port, with the spring keeping the valve in the static open state- vacuum from the compressor intake duct is applied to the entire chamber area below the diaphragm when the exhaust port is open - when vacuum on that large area exceeds spring tension, atmospheric pressure on the upper side of the diaphragm forces it down toward the small-diameter exhaust port, closing the port - vacuum then acts only upon the smaller area of the diaphragm covering the port - the vacuum chamber then equalizes to BARO via a small bleed-port, barely visible at the 2 o'clock position in the down-side up puck cover - with the port closed, the small port-cover area is way less than the overall diaphragm area in the puck, such that any crankcase pressure acting on the larger area adds to BARO pressure and spring tension to overcome the vacuum applied thru the small exhaust port area, releasing any built-up crankcase pressure - repeat as necessary................
The center of the diaphragm valves-off the 1/2" diameter of the exhaust port, but the larger 2-11/32" dia area of the diaphragm is exposed to BARO and crankcase effluent pressure in the chamber, "blowing it open", as necessary - p.s.i. wins, again..................
The inner 2-1/8" diameter of the 2-11/32" diaphragm is thicker rubber with 8 thick radial ribs, allowing it to respond like a piston - the thinner outer area of the circumference is recurved, allowing more compliance - considerable effort is required to compress it when seated in the vacuum chamber - installing the spring requires even more effort -
I'm thinking possibly the normally-aspirated VM CRD gets only the diaphragm, and the spring was added for the turbocharged version -
I may get inspired to instrumentize and hookup my vacuum cleaner again to verify this conjecture, as was done to verify operation of the CDR "tuna can" on the GM 6.5L-TD - be somewhat more difficult now, since all the instruments were fried when the li'l KJ was tasered by the flying fickle finger of Jehovah - and the finger, having writ, moved on.....................
edited for clarity and syntax
_________________ '05 CRD Limited Pricol EGT, Boost GDE Hot '11; EDGE Trail switched SEGR; Provent; Magnaflow; Suncoast T\C, Transgo Tow'n'Go switch; Cummins LP module, Fleetguard filter, Filterminder 2.5" Daystar f, OME r; Ranchos; K80767's, Al's lifted uppers Rubicons, 2.55 Goodyears Four in a row really makes it go
Last edited by gmctd on Wed Nov 12, 2014 5:15 pm, edited 7 times in total.
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