What does an oil catch can do on a Chevy Silverado 5.3?
An oil catch can sits inline on the PCV, or positive crankcase ventilation, dirty side between the valve cover and the intake manifold. As crankcase pressure vents out of the engine, the can slows the airflow through a baffled 6061-T6 aluminum chamber and a stainless steel or bronze filter element that coalesces the oil mist out of the vapor.
The oil drops into a drainable bottom, and clean air keeps flowing to the intake.
On a 5.3 Silverado that means the oil that GM was going to send back through your intake never gets there, which protects the manifold, the MAP sensor, and on the direct-injected trucks the intake valves themselves.
Does my 2014 Chevy Silverado 5.3 actually need a catch can?
Your 2014 5.3 is the L83, which is a Gen 5 LT direct-injected engine, and that is exactly the generation where a catch can earns its keep. Because fuel sprays directly into the cylinder, nothing ever washes the back of the intake valves, so any oil vapor from the PCV bakes onto them as hard carbon over tens of thousands of miles.
GM did not put a catch can on from the factory, so the truck will run without one, but a baffled can is the single cheapest way to slow that carbon buildup on a direct-injected 5.3 or 6.2.
Will a catch can stop carbon buildup on my Silverado 5.3 or 6.2 intake valves?
A catch can will not remove carbon that is already there, but it sharply cuts how much new oil and carbon reaches the valves going forward, which is the whole point on a direct-injected Gen 5 engine. The L83, L86, L84, and L87 all share this vulnerability because none of them spray fuel over the valves.
If your valves are already coked, the fix is a walnut media blast or chemical clean, and the can is what keeps them from going right back to that state.
Think of it as prevention, not a cure, and it does that job well.
How much oil will a Silverado catch can actually collect?
It depends on the engine, the tune, and how you drive, but most 5.3 and 6.2 owners see a few tablespoons to a couple of ounces over a normal oil change interval on a stock truck. Tuned trucks, tow rigs, and high-mileage engines that run AFM or DFM collect noticeably more because they make more crankcase blow-by.
When you drain the brass petcock and see what came out, it is usually a milky mix of oil, condensation, and fuel vapor that you do not want sitting in your intake.
If a can is collecting it, your engine was about to ingest it.
What size catch can do I need for a 6.2L Chevy Silverado?
For a street-driven or tow 6.2L L86 or L87, a standard 2 to 3 ounce baffled 6061-T6 aluminum can is plenty, and that is what fits the under-hood space on the K2XX and T1XX trucks. You do not need a giant can, because a smaller can is emptied more often, which keeps the separator working at full efficiency instead of letting oil sit.
A larger tank only makes sense on a built, big-bore, or hard-run 6.2 that makes serious blow-by between service intervals.
Match the capacity to your driving, not to a bigger-is-better instinct.
Is an oil catch can the same thing as an oil separator?
The two terms get used interchangeably, and on this collection the separator and the catch can do the same job, which is pull oil out of the PCV stream before it reaches the intake. Technically an air-oil separator leans on a finer baffle and filter media to strip more mist out of the vapor, while a basic catch can relies on a baffle to slow and drop the oil.
In practice, a quality baffled catch can with a stainless and bronze element performs essentially the same separation on a 5.3 or 6.2.
Pick the one sized and routed for your generation, not the one with the better marketing word.
Will a catch can void my Chevy Silverado warranty?
We cannot give you a legal warranty ruling, and you should check with your dealer, but a catch can is generally one of the least invasive under-hood mods because it does not delete or bypass factory emissions equipment the way an EGR or DPF delete does. Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act a dealer cannot void your whole warranty just because an aftermarket part is present, though they can deny a claim if they prove the part caused a specific failure.
Keep your stock PCV hose so you can return to factory in minutes if a dealer visit comes up.
When in doubt, talk to your service writer before you install.
Where do I install a catch can on a 2017 Silverado 5.3?
On a 2017 5.3L L83 you install the can on the dirty side of the PCV, which is the line running from the driver side valve cover over to the intake manifold. The can mounts to a bracket on the fender or firewall using the included hardware, and you splice it inline between the valve cover outlet and the intake inlet with the reinforced hoses and billet fittings in the kit.
The clean side, which is the passenger side fresh air line, stays stock on most of these trucks.
It is a hand-tools job that most owners finish in under an hour.
How often do I empty the catch can, and how do I drain it?
Check it at every oil change to start, and once you learn how fast your 5.3 or 6.2 fills it you can set your own interval, which is usually every 3,000 to 5,000 miles. To drain it, hold a small bottle under the knurled brass petcock at the bottom, crack it open, let the collected oil run out, and close it back up.
No tools and no removal required on the cans with a drain valve.
If your can does not have a petcock, unscrew the billet body, dump it, and reinstall.
Is a Chevy Silverado oil catch can legal for street use?
An oil catch can is one of the few performance add-ons that stays street-legal in most states, because it filters PCV blow-by instead of removing or bypassing factory emissions controls like an EGR or DPF delete would.
That said, our full line is marketed for competition and closed-course off-road use only, and some local inspections are strict about any PCV modification, so confirm your state and local rules before you install.
The fitment issue matters here too, so confirm your exact Silverado generation before ordering, because the 2014-2018 L83 and the 2019-up L84 route their PCV differently and the cans are not interchangeable.
Every order ships free, is backed by our 1-year warranty, and is covered by our 45-day return policy if the fit is not right.