Fuel cell vent/over flow
#1
Melting Slicks
Thread Starter
Fuel cell vent/over flow
On my fuel safe fuel cell in my Grand Sport, I am running the vent above the fuel cell and have a roll over valve on the filler neck as well. When I fill my tank I do not know when its full as I found out the other day when I filled it up and had fuel coming out of the vent. Can I run a T in the line on the vent, one for the vent (above the tank) and the other as an over flow???? Thanks
#2
Race Director
so you should have a rollover valve on the vent, as I assume the filler neck is sealed when closed right??? If the vent is higher than the filler, the neck should overfill before it goes out of the vent. If you have a valved in the filler, then you probably need to raise the filler above the vent exit.
#3
You should have a roll over valve in the vent line <maybe you already do> and it should exit to air higher than the fill neck. I wouldn't add a T or an overflow its just another thing to drain etc. If the vent does not exit above the filler neck extend it so the fill neck over flows and you can see it.
Mat
Mat
#4
Melting Slicks
Thread Starter
the vent is above the rollover valve in the fuel cell itself but not the filler neck. If I fill it to the rollover valve on the filler side there is only one place for it to go which would be the vent? Do I need the vent to go higher, and it would still be the same problem correct? Understand not putting a T in the system.
thanks
thanks
#6
Race Director
where do you WANT the fuel to go when it is full??? It has to either go out of the vent, or back out the filler neck. It should be as simple as having the vent higher than the neck.
#8
Burning Brakes
You might want to also consider having the line long enough to have acouple of loops before it ends. This helped resolve he same problem for me a few years ago.
Ed
Ed
#9
You might also consider not using a filler neck. OEMs do huge R&D for fuel tank safety. We just guess at what we think we need. The safest thing you can do is let the cell do its job and contain 100% of the fuel in the cell at all times vs take a chance that you have overfilled the cell and leave fuel in the neck. The safety of the fuel system is in the cell. A neck can hold a good qt or more fuel which is plenty to make a big fire if it brakes off in a collision.