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Date:         Mon, 8 May 2000 08:52:13 -0700
Reply-To:     Steve Sullivan <Steve@NORTHWESTWATCH.ORG>
Sender:       Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From:         Steve Sullivan <Steve@NORTHWESTWATCH.ORG>
Subject:      Fuel spillage
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

My van has not shut off the auto fuel nozzle any time I've ever filled the tank. Many people wrote that they've had this problem since their vans were new and they are just extra careful when they fill.

Guess what I figured out: like most people, I fuel my tank by letting the nozzle hang there while I stand impatiently. This puts the end of the nozzle up at the top of the fuel filler, (I think) about or--just below--where the gas level would be to start flowing out the hole and onto the ground. So even if the back flow of gas reaches the nozzle before the outlet into the world, it's still not enough to shut it off in time to prevent a spill.

My solution? Stand there with the nozzle elevated, so the end of the nozzle points as low as possible. Wa-la! Nozzle shut off just fine: no fuel spill.

Maybe I'm full of #?@$%&, but it worked for me.

Steve

I believe auto shutoff fuel nozzles work by a slight suction created by a Venturi that the fuel jets through inside the valve assembly. On the lower surface of the fuel nozzle near the tip there is a small port connected to a tube that runs inside the nozzle up to the valve assembly. Air is sucked in through that port to relieve the vacuum until fuel or foam reaches it. Then the unrelieved vacuum moves a diaphragm inside the nozzle and trips the fuel cutoff.

It's a mystery to me why two different nozzles would fail to cut off, but it may be because the nozzle was not inserted deeply enough into the filler opening. It's unlikely but possible that both nozzles were defective. I think you need a larger sample than two fill-ups to determine if there is a real problem.

Nick '82 Westy, '88 Jetta, VW camper owner since '67 Mendocino CA

At 02:58 PM 5/3/00 -0700, Stuart MacMillan wrote: >Fuel nozzles cleverly detect the sudden rush of air up the filler pipe >that happens as gas gets up to the top of the tank and shut themselves >off. Really slow filling can fool this system, as can having the nozzle >too far out of the filler neck, but I don't think an air leak in the >tank would. My '84 does not pressurize the tank, I don't think any >Vanagon does. > >The only way to fix a leak would be to drop the tank and check the hoses >and tank condition.


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