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Bart May 30th 07 07:30 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


Joe May 30th 07 08:02 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
On May 30, 1:30 pm, Bart wrote:
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


pumped on, condensation, faulty filler cap seal,

Joe


[email protected] May 30th 07 08:30 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
Bart wrote:
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


Joe wrote:
pumped on, condensation, faulty filler cap seal,


Fourth way: rainwater from deck leaks can settle on top of tank and
work it's way in

5th way: bilgewater can rise over fuel system lines and get sucked in.

I'm sure that Murphy has devised more than that! I hope I never hear
about them, frankly.

DSK



Joe May 30th 07 08:37 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
On May 30, 2:30 pm, wrote:
Bart wrote:
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?

Joe wrote:
pumped on, condensation, faulty filler cap seal,


Fourth way: rainwater from deck leaks can settle on top of tank and
work it's way in

5th way: bilgewater can rise over fuel system lines and get sucked in.

I'm sure that Murphy has devised more than that! I hope I never hear
about them, frankly.

DSK


Also splashed in via the vents.. if the vents have no float balls
above the flame screens. Use to find quite a few copper float balls in
the gulf.

Joe


Bart May 30th 07 09:25 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
On May 30, 3:02 pm, Joe wrote:
On May 30, 1:30 pm, Bart wrote:

What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


pumped on, condensation, faulty filler cap seal,

Joe


Everyone had good answers. I was researching this recently
and read an interesting discussion on condensation. The author
felt that condensation was extremely unlikely to occur, and
that this was a myth. I tend to agree with him.

I'd say pumped on, faulty filler cap, ingress via fill hose cap and
the vent hose. That assumes you have no hose leaks--which
would be pretty obvious.


katy May 30th 07 10:48 PM

Water in your fuel?
 
Bart wrote:
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


If you consistently mow over the property line so you can make a
squatter's right claim for caretaking....sugar works, too....

Edgar May 31st 07 08:28 AM

Water in your fuel?
 

"katy" wrote in message
...
Bart wrote:
What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


If you consistently mow over the property line so you can make a
squatter's right claim for caretaking....sugar works, too....


???



Scout May 31st 07 10:49 AM

Water in your fuel?
 
"Bart" wrote in message
oups.com...
On May 30, 3:02 pm, Joe wrote:
On May 30, 1:30 pm, Bart wrote:

What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


pumped on, condensation, faulty filler cap seal,

Joe


Everyone had good answers. I was researching this recently
and read an interesting discussion on condensation. The author
felt that condensation was extremely unlikely to occur, and
that this was a myth. I tend to agree with him.

I'd say pumped on, faulty filler cap, ingress via fill hose cap and
the vent hose. That assumes you have no hose leaks--which
would be pretty obvious.


Bart,
I'm not sure what would make an onboard tank less susceptible to
condensation than our 10,000 gallon surface diesel tanks, but they get
condensation all the time and we have to pump them out regularly.
Scout



katy May 31st 07 11:49 AM

Water in your fuel?
 
Edgar wrote:
"katy" wrote in message
...

Bart wrote:

What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


If you consistently mow over the property line so you can make a
squatter's right claim for caretaking....sugar works, too....



???


Putting water or sugar in someone's gas tank is an old country remedy
for settling property line disputes....

Maxprop May 31st 07 02:44 PM

Water in your fuel?
 

"katy" wrote in message
...
Edgar wrote:
"katy" wrote in message
...

Bart wrote:

What are the three ways water can get into your fuel tank?


If you consistently mow over the property line so you can make a
squatter's right claim for caretaking....sugar works, too....



???

Putting water or sugar in someone's gas tank is an old country remedy for
settling property line disputes....


It never settled anything, rather it provoked inter-family feuds (not the
gameshow type either). Some of those feuds became violent. I think
Michigan was rife with such disputes.

Max




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