Air ventilation route has changed on the Scout and Chief engines during the entire production years and it seems to have been trial and error and a compromise at best. Nothing the factory has come up with did work at all speeds and with all kinds of engine conditions.
The culprit is piston ring sealing. All comes down to that. With fresh cylinders, fresh piston rings most all ventilation variations works fairly well. As soon as blow-by past the piston rings gets over a certain limit, the ventilation gets too restricted and overpressure makes oil blow everywhere, leaks start to appear from the most strange places.
For our 101, original the ventilation system differs a bit if the outer tube is mounted on the crankcase or the cam compartment. If you have the tube on the crankcase left side, the system contains of two one-way flutter valves.
Fresh air is ingested through the magneto shaft hole in the cam compartment. There is a oil catching labyrinth consistening of a flanged steel ring pressed in the magneto shaft hole, that works in conjunction with a oil sling washer welded on the back of the magneto gear. The system reduces and slows down any oil mist and any remaining oil runs back through a small hole drilled behind the cam compartment steel ring. Between the cam case and magneto housing there should be a felt washer that permiate air but shields from dust and water spray.
The air is flowing from the cam case into the crankcase through a one-way flutter valve mounted on the wall behind one of the cams. Air in the crankcase mixes with blow-by gasses and the overpressure is vented out through the outer ventilation tube that has another one-way flutter valve.
With the other system where the ventilation tube is mounted on the cam case there is just one flutter valve, and the air flow is reversed from the crankcase. The vent tube is removed from the left crankcase and the hole is plugged with a washer or the lug is just blank and never drilled. The flutter valve and its cage behind the cam is discarded with and there is just one big hole. In this case the overpressure produced from piston movements and combustion blow-by, is vented through that hole and further through the vent tube with flutter valve, now mounted on the cam cover.
The changeover of the vent system took place around 1929-30 (DGP 6700-7600) In the parts list there is a number difference from 1930 to 1931 on the felt washer between cam case and magneto housing. (27 B 161 and 26 B 105) that might indicate that the specifications are different between the two. I would guess the latter is more dense.
Of course there is air movement both in and out of the crankcase during run, and that is carrying oil into the crankcase. Oil transportation is also provided by the center hole in the crankshaft. The centrifugal (centripetal) forces in the crankshaft when it spins produces a constant suction through that hole.
There is advantages and disadvantages with both systems, but they all go bad with too much blow-by, so cylinder and piston ring condition is a key factor to keep an eye on. Ventilation on the cam case might reduce the oil consumption or rather oil waist, slightly.
The flutter disc is however restricting the flow and there is an easy modification that can be done to improve it. There is a better flowing valve on the market that is similar to the original appearence (Moto Valve or Duffy valve from Terry Duffy) and there is a couple of other valves (Krank vent from Old Irons and Silent Crank Vent from Kiwi) that mounts at the end of the tube and can be bought at many Indian providers. Krank vent has been reported to be a bit noisy though...