Thanks for the suggestion. Im pretty sure it is in the intake. But I will check againSome alternators have a over running clutch which alternator to continue to spin after engine is not turning
Brad
Thanks for the reply. Filter or filler? I removed the filler cap and there is still a woosh. If I remove the filter cap wont oil come out under pressure?Try running it without the oil filter cap and see if it still has a woosh.
That is what I figured and tried. I still get the woosh thoughPretty sure Lonny was talking about the oil fill cap on the valve cover.
I have to agree with chad on this one.I know you aren't getting much help with this. I wish I could help more, but I am at a loss for specific solutions. It seems like decompression back through the intake. I'm not sure why that would happen. Could be a leaking intake valve allowing compression back through the intake. I assume you don't have the EVAP connected in anyway. That is the only other form of pressure/vacuum that I can think of that would be plumbed in to the intake.
I have to agree with chad on this one.
Possible low compression when you shut it off that it is rolling the engine backwards. It almost sounds like it sneezed? How many miles on the engine?
180,000 miles. It ran just fine before teardown. And it seems to run good now. Just making that weird noise. Could it have something to do with the throttle body? Its probably pretty dirty with 180 on it.How did the car run before you took it apart?
You are correct! Just checked and it is in fact under vacuum when the woosh sounds. I will clean my tb. Pretty sure that will take care of it.Air should rush in since the inside of the manifold is under vacuum when you shut the engine off. You could test that theory by putting a piece of tape or a piece of string that dangles over the the TB and see which direction it goes when the whoosh happens.
Doesn't really matter though. If it's dirty, then it's probably a good idea to clean it regardless.