Gas tank vent?
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73SpeedBuggy
- Posts: 184
- Joined: Tue Mar 30, 2010 5:00 am
Gas tank vent?
Does the gas tank need vented? I installed a new tank on my buggy (purchased back in '05, been on the road for about a month now) as the old one was rusting through. The new one has a hose fitting on the neck like it wants to be vented. Does it need to be vented? It seems to me that with a hose on that fitting there, if I take a sharp left turn gas would spill out the hose.
- 5150bossman
- Posts: 612
- Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2010 5:00 am
- Location: So Cal
If you have a gas cap that makes a seal, then yes the tank needs to be vented. If you have a 68 or later style tank with the filler in the back, then a vent hose connected to the filler neck shouldn't get much slosh. If you have a 67 or earlier style tank with the filler in front, then yes the stock vent hose connector will probably leak when you turn and stop. That's why a lot of people weld the stock filler neck location on older tanks closed and relocate it to the top rear of the tank. Some builders use flip open type filler caps that are designed with a vent. If you just have a stock VW gas cap then you could drill a small diameter hole through the top of the cap and plug off vent line fitting on the neck with JB Weld. If the engine gets starved for gas, drill the hole bigger.
I ran into this problem when I was relocating my filler neck on my '71 tank. I ended up using the outlet pipe as a vent by drilling a small hole at the area of the original filler neck and welding it in place. It is in the top most location of the tank when installed in the buggy and is in an expansion area where there will be no gas. I'll attach a hose to it and loop it a couple of times. Being the same ID as the outlet I'm hoping for a neutral pressure when idle and running. 

- 5150bossman
- Posts: 612
- Joined: Thu Apr 01, 2010 5:00 am
- Location: So Cal

All the fuel vapors and raw fuel exit below the buggy.