The pcv is pushing oil but I fixed that and still getting oil in the intake right by the intake tube
How did you "fix that"?
PCV stands for positive crankcase ventilation
It is suppose to pull air from the valve cover/crankcase area of the engine to be burned with fuel/air mix.
If it was "pushing oil" that means it was in contact with oil, or alot of oil vapor.
If there are no baffle plates protecting the PCV or Vent hoses in the valve cover then oil from the cam/rockers can splash directly onto the PCV valve/vent tube and be sucked in, which would give you oil in the intake.
If you were using cheap oil it can vaporize at a lower temp so cause too much oil vapor, this vaporization is from blow-by which is normal on all engines, but those hot gases will vaporize cheap oil on the cylinder walls faster than "good" oil.
As rings get older, 250k miles, you can get excessive blow-by which can give you more oil vapor even with "good" oil.
Dry then wet compression test can tell you how much ring wear you have.
When a cylinder fires the rapidly expanding combustion of fuel/air pushes down on the piston and makes the crank turn.
The piston has metal rings sliding against metal cylinder walls, so can not seal in the expanding gases completely, so some of this 1,000+degF gas will go past the rings and into the crankcase, this is Blow-by, and is normal.
The cylinder walls are lubricated by the piston oil passages, some oil will be vaporize by the hot gases, but it will condense on cooler parts of the engine.
Cheaper oil can vaporize more so some of it will make it up to the valve cover area and be sucked in by the PCV or Vent hose