firestarter2
Well-Known Member
Not to be dense but this sounds like a bunch of nonsense. What is your math supposed to mean?Oil catch cans have to be the biggest scam on the GT350 aftermarket. Don't fear detonation or contamination. Apply some logic:
The engine makes plenty of power. Although it looks like substantial mass in the can, divide the mass by say, 100 x 10^6 strokes over 3,000 miles at 4,000 rpm (a good median), at 60 mph (another median). The result is picograms or nanograms of residue per oil change. Most of the aliphatic mass would be blown right out of the engine with the exhaust cycle. There are also additives in gas that probably create residues as well. There are so many other things that will affect performance before insignificantly minute masses of oil.
For Ford, catch cans are nominal cost and maintenance would be a profit, and more than likely they left them off to strip weight due to no perceived benefit. If Ford Performance cares nothing about keeping the engine innards pristine, why go through the trouble and substantial cost if there is no proven benefit? This not a data-driven decision; it's a reaction to hype. Probably the only good reason to have a can would be to counter blow-by induced by a turbo- or super- charged intake, otherwise don't worry about it. Those Track Attack cars do not have catch cans installed as I have asked people who have gone to the FPRS.
Ford recommend catch cans for the track. Turbos can cause blow by. As can large gaps in piston rings.
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