I have the old problem of my breather plug spitting out oil, no seals are shagged , is there a fix for this?
frank
Breather plug
-
- registered user
- Posts: 545
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 7:46 pm
- Xbox live gamer tag: Pleasure Master
- Main scooter: lambretta gp150
- Location: Gold Coast Queensland Australia
- Contact:
How come phonetics isn't spelt with an 'f'?
Check out my boobs! <-- <--Just imagine being burried between those puppies!
Check out my boobs! <-- <--Just imagine being burried between those puppies!
-
- registered user
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 7:41 am
- Main scooter: Lambretta GP
- Location: Bromley, Kent
- Contact:
I've seen a few breather bolts machined down to accept a flexible plastic tube with a small air filter on the end.
I'm sure someone was producing them, but would be fairly simple to knock up yourself.
I'm sure someone was producing them, but would be fairly simple to knock up yourself.
-
- registered user
- Posts: 1741
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 8:42 am
- Main scooter: Lambretta TV175 S3- what else!
- Location: Bali-Hai bar, Locarno Ballroom Bristol, 1967!- mines a Brown Split!!
- Contact:
I always use an original breather plug from which I've removed all the crud and the wire wool from the last 40 odd years- this allows any build up of pressure within the case to exit via the plug as intended and not force its way past any seal. There may be a slight "weeping" of oil but this is preferable to a blown seal IMO
Chris
Chris
Scootering since 1968.
Good advice and seconded by me....bristolmod wrote:I always use an original breather plug from which I've removed all the crud and the wire wool from the last 40 odd years- this allows any build up of pressure within the case to exit via the plug as intended and not force its way past any seal. There may be a slight "weeping" of oil but this is preferable to a blown seal IMO
Chris

-
- registered user
- Posts: 545
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 7:46 pm
- Xbox live gamer tag: Pleasure Master
- Main scooter: lambretta gp150
- Location: Gold Coast Queensland Australia
- Contact:
Pretty much what i'm thinking.... but running a hose from the breather plug to the air filter, simular deal to a PCV setup on a car.Avantone wrote:I've seen a few breather bolts machined down to accept a flexible plastic tube with a small air filter on the end.
I'm sure someone was producing them, but would be fairly simple to knock up yourself.
How come phonetics isn't spelt with an 'f'?
Check out my boobs! <-- <--Just imagine being burried between those puppies!
Check out my boobs! <-- <--Just imagine being burried between those puppies!
a while ago i fitted a mbd stainless breather plug, then noticed oil being forced out? put the old one back in and problem solved 

gabba gabba hey gabba we accept you one of us
I thought this was only done on a four stroke, somthing to do with crank pressure and Inlet vacume on diffrent parts of 720 degree ( Two revolutions ) four stroke cycle.... I would be very interested to know how this performs if you connect back to the air box. Please dont forget to post back your findings if you go down this route, as any knowledge gained is a good thing....another Idea on this forum that I had never thought of....so for now disregard my last post...red ghost wrote:Pretty much what i'm thinking.... but running a hose from the breather plug to the air filter, simular deal to a PCV setup on a car.Avantone wrote:I've seen a few breather bolts machined down to accept a flexible plastic tube with a small air filter on the end.
I'm sure someone was producing them, but would be fairly simple to knock up yourself.
On 4 strokes any unburnt hydrocarbons getting past the piston rings go directly into the crankcase, due to emission laws these were no longer allowed to be vented to air so are fed back into intake system to be re-burnt. On a 2 stroke blow-by does not get into the crankcase unless the drive side seal has gone so PCV would be a waste of time.
-
- registered user
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 7:41 am
- Main scooter: Lambretta GP
- Location: Bromley, Kent
- Contact:
The remote breathers I've seen vent to atmosphere, and were not recycled. Though one of the photos on the 100 MPH Lambretta Club site show a breather tube disappearing into the main frame tube, with what maybe an integral filter?J1MS wrote:I thought this was only done on a four stroke, somthing to do with crank pressure and Inlet vacume on diffrent parts of 720 degree ( Two revolutions ) four stroke cycle.... I would be very interested to know how this performs if you connect back to the air box. Please dont forget to post back your findings if you go down this route, as any knowledge gained is a good thing....another Idea on this forum that I had never thought of....so for now disregard my last post...red ghost wrote:Pretty much what i'm thinking.... but running a hose from the breather plug to the air filter, simular deal to a PCV setup on a car.Avantone wrote:I've seen a few breather bolts machined down to accept a flexible plastic tube with a small air filter on the end.
I'm sure someone was producing them, but would be fairly simple to knock up yourself.

- byron
- registered user
- Posts: 1226
- Joined: Wed Jan 07, 2009 11:45 am
- Main scooter: Li Special; scarred,but sound
- Location: norwich
- Contact:
here's mine :

I just cut the top off an old breather, welded a bit of tube on and fitted that boy racer filter which cost about £3 from ebay. seems to work, and doesn't leak, unlike the stainless one i was using previously

I just cut the top off an old breather, welded a bit of tube on and fitted that boy racer filter which cost about £3 from ebay. seems to work, and doesn't leak, unlike the stainless one i was using previously