the point of the pcv valve is to allow the crankcase blowby gases, which are mainly made up of unburned fuel to return to the combustion chamber. The fuel vapour can if its not recirclated from the crankcase have a detrimental effect on the quality of the oil, causing it to dilute and decrease its lubrication abilities and contribute to sludge build up. At high engine speeds, blow-by gases can cause oil seals to fail.
how does it work ?
the gtir has a variable flow pcv valve.
The system use manifold vacuam to draw the blowby gases into the intake manifold. Obviously blow by gases are at the highest at high engine speeds and at their lightest at low load situations (idle, deceleration). The manifold vacuam does not match the requirements for proper crankcase ventilation. The pcv valve is used to regulate blowby flow back into the inlet manifold.
at idle, deceleration blowby gases are low, but vacuam is high. The valve will basically close, although a small passage remains allowing the low amounts of blowby to flow into the inlet and into the combustion chamber.
during low load cruising the valve opens slightly and allows a moderate amount of blowby into the inlet and the combustion chamber.
during high load situations (WOT) blowby gases are high, the valve fully opens allowing a large amount of blowby into the inlet and into the combustion chamber. However, during extremely high loads the amount of blowby gases can be more than the pcv valve can flow, the excess blowby will then flow through the breather hose, oil seperator and be drawn back into the combustion chamber through the air inlet.
When the engine is off or backfires spring tension in the valve causes it to close completely preventing the release of blowby into the intake and during a backfire to prevent the flame from travelling into the crankcase where it could ignite the fuel vapours.
The pcv valves operation is taken into account as part of the ecus proper feedback control, problems with the pcv valve can have an effect on the air fuel ratios. A blocked pcv valve will prevent the normal flow of blowby gases and can cause a richer than normal afr. A blocked crankcase breather may cause the engine to use oil due to the increased levels of crankcase pressure. A fooked valve or restricted breather/vacuam hose can cause oil to contaminate the intake.
in relation to emissions if the crankcase oil gets diluted with fuel, and that vapour is then drawn through as it should be, carbon monoxide levels can increase as the pcv system is now allowing the fuel/oil vapour into the combustion chamber.
to conclude, nissan put it there for a reason, the fact some have trouble with oil contamination in the intake is due to age and condition of the engine. Removing it will probably cause a standard ecu'd car to run ever so slightly rich as there oxygen that is left in the crankcase gases is not being recirculated, no bigdeal, but removing it may cause problems with crankcase pressures causing blown oilseals if the breather system is not adequate.
i'd say for most this is not a problem and removing the pcv/breather system has the better effect on old engines due to the oil contamination problems, most cant be arsed to clean, replace the parts and on an old engine it wont take long for the problem to return. On a fresh build there shouldn't be any problem with this as the engine is basically new
The cooling affect mentioned at the start of this thread is not due to carbon dioxide but the fuel vapour being recirculated, again not harmful but probably not that harmful if you didn't have it as lots of people have removed it all over the world, i highly doubt it would contribute to any detonation if you didn't have it
lesson of today..
your all wrong and the tro||s more than just an occasional nuscience...lol