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What difference have you observed it make?i put one on as well as many others have. i made the bracket and got a cheap can off amazon, 25 bucks at the time. if you get the cheap one, the hose they give you is trash, so you'll need to buy some real hose.
A recommended mode.Is a catch can recommended or needed for these older Tahoes?
Yes, doesn't matter if it's a 4.8L, 5.3L, 5.7L, 6.0L, 6.2L, 6.6L, or 7.0L.Is a catch can recommended?
you'll notice no difference. but you'll have piece of mind that that oil in the can is not laying in your intake. mine is ran right off the top of the pcv valve, so what its catching is what would end up in the intake.What difference have you observed it make?
I asked the question not because I doubted anyone. I asked it, hoping an answer would demonstrate the utility. I think it is a good mod. I don't know that it is *necessary*, but I do think there is enough value to add it if you can.you'll notice no difference. but you'll have piece of mind that that oil in the can is not laying in your intake. mine is ran right off the top of the pcv valve, so what its catching is what would end up in the intake.
your 100% on track there.I asked the question not because I doubted anyone. I asked it, hoping an answer would demonstrate the utility. I think it is a good mod. I don't know that it is *necessary*, but I do think there is enough value to add it if you can.
As @Scottydoggs mentioned the hoses in that particular kit, I went with some high-quality silicone hose. With winter coming, if you're in a freeze zone, make sure you keep a close eye on it or bypass for the season.Is a catch can recommended or needed for these older Tahoes?
So the design is to burn off that oil, not because it is supposed to, but because it needs to relieve the crankcase pressure. Part of the oil is becoming aerated, and going back into the manifold which makes that dirty, and then into the combustion chamber, (and I wouldn't know if then into the exhaust as unburnt or an exhaust gas).What difference have you observed it make?
Sounds like my father in law I changed spark plugs the other day trying to trace the Tahoes misfire and he said “let me guess you changed all 8 diddnt you?” Then “overkill overkill keep wasting your money” I’m like dude I got them on sale and with my discount it was 20$ for a set of ngks like why would I not change all 8 if I’m already in there that’s just stupid in my opinion but he’s a don’t fix it if it ain’t broke type of person. Same person who give me hell for changing the valve cover gasket on my Acura for leaking oil on the header causing a smoke screen inside the car if it was sitting and idling the amount of oil you would have to add within a 2-4 month span would equal a damn valve cover gasket so why not fix the issue but “my corvettes leaked oil for 100,000 miles I ain’t changed no gasket” well that’s on you bud idk what to tell ya!!It is so refreshing to see that guys here understand the whole point of a catch can. A member of another forum I am on asked a similar question and whoo boy. Let me tell you there are a few "Old heads" ( and I'm not exactly young), that will rip into you over this subject. "If you need a something to catch blowby you just need to rebuild your engine" or " I would never own a vehicle that had that much blowby" or " its a truck not a racecar" or my personal favorite....." if a catch can did anything useful, the factory would have installed one".
And no matter how you try to explain that all it does is collect vapors. Not that it makes power or does anything magic. It simply AIDES the pcv system. And yes the Silverado had a significant amount of blowby.... I'm still not going to rebuild an engine in a truck that is yes structurally sound, but rusty as hell.