Did you see the oil yourself? Or just going off what they said
This area is also home to your front struts. If you plan on installing coilovers or drop springs, you need to access the top hats to get your springs out.
Take a small screwdriver and pry up the caps on the windshield wipers.
Expose the 15mm nuts holding on the windshield wipers. Remove these and you can pull the wipers up and off. I used vice grips with one side of the jaw on the stud, and the other underneath the wiper arm to pry them off without visible damage.
On either end of the cowl are a rubber flap, a foam pad, and a nylon rivet
The cowl has 4 nylon rivets. Once these are removed, you can remove this piece by working one side, and then the other.
Here is the tophat for the driver strut. I've never seen a design that doesn't bolt in, so this is probably pressed into the body.
Removing the dust cover exposes the top of the strut piston. Using an open ended wrench, and really big Torx driver, you can unbolt the top of the strut from the car.
5 10mm bolts remove a firewall cover. Wires go through the cover to the windshield wiper motor, so I just moved it aside. I used an existing hole and an automotive bolt/spacer to mount the catch can mount to the firewall.
My 1.8 Is the same way. I don't know the exact reason why but my theory is to keep the crank case totally vapor free. Also a loose dipstick will cause the rough idle to
(source: Oil catch can explained (read if tuned) - Page 3 )Originally Posted by Vince
I think it is a very smart investment. In fact, my Cadillac ATS has a contraption on it that resembles the factory’s effort at implementing a catch can.
There are actually two ways oil can contaminate the intake tract on these engines. When the manifold is under vacuum, the PCV vapors are ingested right at the manifold, but obviously this doesn’t work under boost. The check valve in the line to the manifold prevents boost from going into the crankcase, and instead crankcase vapors are routed to the turbo’s compressor inlet. This means anything that comes out of the crankcase will go through the turbo and collect in the intake tract. Eventually this oil can contaminate the intake manifold, intake valves, and even piston heads.
I think it is very wise to put a catch can in between the crankcase line that goes to the turbo compressor inlet to prevent the oil and vapors from going through the turbo. I’m not sure you need one on the other side that goes into the intake manifold, because there isn’t likely to be much crankcase pressure when the engine is under vacuum. All of GM’s factory turbocharged engines, tuned, or not, if driven aggressively can accumulate oil in the intake tract, and it’s obvious they tried to address that issue on the Cadillac ATS. The earlier engines, like the LNF, LHU/LDK and the LUJ/LUV have no mechanism to collect oil from the PCV system and in fact the Cobalt SS owner’s manual says to expect increased oil consumption with aggressive driving. I guess they mean in the intake tract! ;-)
What size fittings are required to connect a catch can to the stock PCV hose? Thanks a lot.
James