It’s probably missing the flexible cold air intake hose that would have gone 
towards the front of the car.

The crankcase breather shouldn’t be giving out much in the way of warm air 
unless the engine is well worn.
You can fit the breather into a hole in the bottom of the K & N but i still 
found that oil collected inside the filter and leaked out when the engine was 
stopped.
Until i had the turbo engine i just rang the breather down a long hose to the 
bottom of the engine bay and let it go to atmosphere, plus any oil just drips 
on the ground.
The turbo has a catch tank with a breather filter on the top but it still blows 
oil out of the top of the tank.

Jim

From: Alan 
Sent: Monday, October 08, 2012 9:15 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: [Quantum Owners] Re: K&N filter

It has the vacuum controlled valve but it's not connected up. Since the 
distance between the warm air intake and the cold air intake isn't that great, 
the manifold isn't heat shielded and neither is the filter housing I can't 
imagine it making much difference even if it were connected up. I hadn't 
thought that was for carb icing but that makes sense. IIRC Haynes suggested it 
was about cutting emissions?  I suppose if carb icing were to become an issue I 
could run a hot air feed to the filter... or just sit idling for a while and 
let the heat soak do the work.

This seems to be one winter fix with the same filter: 
http://justintuijl.com/images/fiestaxr2/chvengine.jpg - 
http://justintuijl.com/cars/fordfiestaxr2modifiedcvhengine.php#.UHMyY1HZ1_c

If I connected the breather hoses to the filter housing might that get some 
warm air coming in from the crankcase?

On Monday, October 8, 2012 5:40:29 PM UTC+1, Alan wrote: 
  The original filter housing on the TDLM seems rather OTT and draws air right 
in from over the very hot exhaust manifold, so I've picked up a rather neat 
looking bolt on K&N filter. Was just wondering if anyone else had made the 
change to one of these? If so, did you change the jets as the kit on mine 
recommends and what did you do with the crankcase breather? 

  I'm thinking the best option would be to drill a hole in the base to match 
the hole on the original filter housing and feed the breather into that. 
Slightly worried about heat soak but the under-bonnet temperatures in mine are 
sky high anyway so wherever the air feed comes from it'll be hot. 

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