Well…had a chance to take 3291R out for an extended ride today. This after tearing the oil pan off, replacing gaskets and seals at front and rear, new header and exhaust…and filled with 4.5 US Quarts of VR-1 20/50.
Had taken it out a couple weeks ago, and there was still oil coming from somewhere on the left side (the right side drain tube needs to be replaced…it’s still leaking, so I know about that, and a small weep at the back of the head/block joint). Harkening back to my experience with 693R (even though that's a Renault mill), I was thinking that there is some being blown up the dipstick tube..so, just to prove out the assumption, I shrank a piece of adhesive-lined shrink tubing up by the bulge on the dipstick handle (covering about 2” from before the bulge down the stick), and inserted back in the dipstick tube. It all fit nicely..pulled out and checked oil level: right on Full.
Backed out of the garage and headed off...20 miles later with mixed limited access and stop and go city driving, with some trepidation, pulled back into garage over my cardboard mats on the floor, and popped the boot.
Nothing on the shift tubes that wasn't there before, on the battery heat shield, or dripping down from that side…or showing up as fresh spots on the cardboard (discounting the other side, ok? I know about that…one thing at a time).
Thinking that adding a second breather fitting to the front of the cam cover, plumbing that together with the one on the carb side of the head and feeding, through an air-oil separator, to the carb air box may lessen the pressure in the crankcase even more by using whatever minor vacuum exists in the airbox to pull the vapors out rather than pumping them up and down by the motions of the rotating mass and pistons and lessen the oil mist escaping to rustproof the chassis even more.
Incremental improvements are a good thing, right?