# 1 Breather Separator
Hello Group print
Ever
try to service your breather separator?
It's that cone shaped
what-cha-ma-call-it on the right side of the CH 250/Ch 150 near the muffler that
is part of the emissions system similar to the PVC system on cars.
Crankcase
gases pass through
the breather hoses to the catch tank and breather separator.
Through
normal cooling, oil deposits are caught in the breather element and filtered
with the residue going down the drain tube.
Normal
service is to drain the tube.
Normal---did I say normal?
Two problems
exist
First, below the breather separator cone is a rubber elbow which cracks and
spills the residue on top of the crankcase.
Second, trying to remove the
breather separator is next to impossible since one of the three mounting screws
near the back is behind the heat protector and hard to remove.
Removing the 8mm
bracket bolts is no picnic since one runs perpendicular to the nice muffler
which you have to remove to get to.
Know what that nice rubber elbow costs from
Honda? Over six dollars! The element is a buck and change.
I have a better way!
Remove the muffler and place it on the kitchen table.
Do this when your wife is
out with the girls.
Remove the three 8mm bracket screws and the breather
separator.
Disassemble
the breather separator by removing the three screws from below the bracket.
Wash
all parts in sudsy water.
Pry up the element holder from within and throw away
the worthless element.
At the hardware store buy the following:
1- 3/8x3/8 nylon
hose barb elbow (.68)
3- small 3/8 automotive clamps (1.50)
1- foot 1/2 OD
x 3/8 ID clear vinyl hose (.23).
Borrow
one small coffee filter (net 0.01) from the wife and cut it to fit inside the
breather separator and attach the plastic stay.
Cut the barb edge off one side
of the plastic elbow and butt it to the edge of the separator.
Connect the two
with a small piece of hose.
Clamp the hose and elbow together to reconfigure
that worthless rubber boot.
You
will
NOT need a clamp over the bottom of the breather cone.
Attach the rest of the clear hose to the other end of the elbow
and clamp.
Use the third clamp to secure the drain plug at the end of the hose.
Reinstall in reverse order
EXCEPT ATTACH THE FRONT AND RIGHT SIDE SCREW AND LEAVE OUT THE BACK ONE.
Remove muffler from kitchen table and install.
Total
cost of the project was $2.41 and you now can see any residue through all the
tube, have a better filtering system costing pennies, and a serviceable breather
without ever removing
the muffler.
The wife likes that but I didn't mention the kitchen table.
Randy Pozzi (Rev. 02/2003)