v8frank
Member
Hi guys,
I am fighting gas tank troubles since I got my car about 4 years ago. Every time I do a fill up the vent lines will overflow.This problem persists to this day even after I did all of the below!
But let me first give you some details of the car.
It's a '69 Sat cloned into a very well made and detailed A12 Runner. This includes a great performing 440 with a six-barrel set-up on top of it.The rest of the drivetrain consists of a TKO-600 5 speed and a Dana 60 with 4.10 gears.(hence the TKO)
The gas tank had been replaced before I got the car. The sending unit is a new 3/8 " unit with a 1/4" return line .Main fuel line is 3/8". The return line was pluged off when I got the car because there was no return line to begin with and no fuel vapor separator near the fuel pump either.
When I got the car it had the 2 original vent lines connected to the tank.The short u-shaped one that goes up and comes down again plus the one that goes into the trunk and comes out again on the passenger side and ends up in that sides frame rail.
The first time the overflowing showed up caused the short vent line overflowing. Which makes sense as it is the shortest way for the gas to get out.
Right after this I got the car on the lift to check the vent lines. I found out that the long vent line was clogged by using compressed air. I took it out and I could manage to clean it out.
I was sure that solved the problem.....until the next fill-up!!!:angryfire:
In the meanwhile I have added an original fuel vapor separator next to the pump and a 1/4" return line connected to the sending unit.
I got then in touch with a well known Mopar guru from a well known Mopar magazine and after sending him some pictures from my vent lines on the tank, he suggested to remove the short vent line thinking of it only necessary for California emissions set-up !
So I plugged off the short vent line connecter on the tank and after the next fill-up the long vent line now overflowed into the frame rail and on to a buddys driveway.
The quantity of overflowing gas is extreme ! I would easily guess at least half a gallon.:icon_eek:
After the last fill-up I did, like 2 weeks ago, I backed up the car in another friends driveway with a very, very slight slope say almost level and when I opened the fuel filler cap I had almost half a gallon of gas coming out before it stopped. A couple of hours later it still had leaked on the floor through the long vent line.The gas cap is an original replacement and is like the original cap NOT vented!
Once the fuel goes below a certain level everything is fine of course.
I checked the vent line connections on the fuel tank ,blowing some air into them and I could hear and feal the air as I had the sending unit out again.(tank empty) Thinking that maybe the vent lines might be clogged in the tank, but no.
The fill-ups work absolutely normal;no slush back etc.etc.
I have found literally dozens of people in different forums, that own especially '68 to '70 Runners or Sats for that matter,that have these kind of trouble with their gas tanks but nobody ever comes up with a solution to this problem!!! :confused5:
I have seen drilled fuel caps on several cars and other crazy stuff to solve the problem.
I hate the idea of doing crazy things with gas vapors but I hate the idea of an overflowing fuel tank on my car even more.Think of somebody throwing his cigarette butt on the ground at a car show.!!! Whazzzzaaaaa.....:angryfire:
Is it expansion of the gas, due to temperature differences, in the tank that is causing it ?
But then how can it build up pressure in the tank high enough to make the long vent line fill up with gas and then overflow?! How could it do that when it is ventilated?
Is the problem caused by a bad or incorrect reproduction gas tank ?
Could the vapor separator cause somehow additional pressure build-up in the tank from the pump?! But it did it before I added those!
What did people do back in those years that were living in the San Francisco hills? Parking their cars with the front downhill ?! :icon_confused:
I'm speachless and frustrated !:sad2:
Anyone with a real solution to this ?
Thanks.
Best regards, :hello2:
Frank
I am fighting gas tank troubles since I got my car about 4 years ago. Every time I do a fill up the vent lines will overflow.This problem persists to this day even after I did all of the below!
But let me first give you some details of the car.
It's a '69 Sat cloned into a very well made and detailed A12 Runner. This includes a great performing 440 with a six-barrel set-up on top of it.The rest of the drivetrain consists of a TKO-600 5 speed and a Dana 60 with 4.10 gears.(hence the TKO)
The gas tank had been replaced before I got the car. The sending unit is a new 3/8 " unit with a 1/4" return line .Main fuel line is 3/8". The return line was pluged off when I got the car because there was no return line to begin with and no fuel vapor separator near the fuel pump either.
When I got the car it had the 2 original vent lines connected to the tank.The short u-shaped one that goes up and comes down again plus the one that goes into the trunk and comes out again on the passenger side and ends up in that sides frame rail.
The first time the overflowing showed up caused the short vent line overflowing. Which makes sense as it is the shortest way for the gas to get out.
Right after this I got the car on the lift to check the vent lines. I found out that the long vent line was clogged by using compressed air. I took it out and I could manage to clean it out.
I was sure that solved the problem.....until the next fill-up!!!:angryfire:
In the meanwhile I have added an original fuel vapor separator next to the pump and a 1/4" return line connected to the sending unit.
I got then in touch with a well known Mopar guru from a well known Mopar magazine and after sending him some pictures from my vent lines on the tank, he suggested to remove the short vent line thinking of it only necessary for California emissions set-up !
So I plugged off the short vent line connecter on the tank and after the next fill-up the long vent line now overflowed into the frame rail and on to a buddys driveway.
The quantity of overflowing gas is extreme ! I would easily guess at least half a gallon.:icon_eek:
After the last fill-up I did, like 2 weeks ago, I backed up the car in another friends driveway with a very, very slight slope say almost level and when I opened the fuel filler cap I had almost half a gallon of gas coming out before it stopped. A couple of hours later it still had leaked on the floor through the long vent line.The gas cap is an original replacement and is like the original cap NOT vented!
Once the fuel goes below a certain level everything is fine of course.
I checked the vent line connections on the fuel tank ,blowing some air into them and I could hear and feal the air as I had the sending unit out again.(tank empty) Thinking that maybe the vent lines might be clogged in the tank, but no.
The fill-ups work absolutely normal;no slush back etc.etc.
I have found literally dozens of people in different forums, that own especially '68 to '70 Runners or Sats for that matter,that have these kind of trouble with their gas tanks but nobody ever comes up with a solution to this problem!!! :confused5:
I have seen drilled fuel caps on several cars and other crazy stuff to solve the problem.
I hate the idea of doing crazy things with gas vapors but I hate the idea of an overflowing fuel tank on my car even more.Think of somebody throwing his cigarette butt on the ground at a car show.!!! Whazzzzaaaaa.....:angryfire:
Is it expansion of the gas, due to temperature differences, in the tank that is causing it ?
But then how can it build up pressure in the tank high enough to make the long vent line fill up with gas and then overflow?! How could it do that when it is ventilated?
Is the problem caused by a bad or incorrect reproduction gas tank ?
Could the vapor separator cause somehow additional pressure build-up in the tank from the pump?! But it did it before I added those!
What did people do back in those years that were living in the San Francisco hills? Parking their cars with the front downhill ?! :icon_confused:
I'm speachless and frustrated !:sad2:
Anyone with a real solution to this ?
Thanks.
Best regards, :hello2:
Frank