Re: Fuel Pump
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Regarding your bottom two pictures, i can't tell you how many random projects i've used those on where they don't appear to fill up. The air is trapped in there and so the gas keeps going through the filter, but the air just sits there and makes it look like it's not. If you were to take the outlet line off and pump some fuel, you MIGHT coax some of that air out, but it's always been there in those type of filters for me, and never given me any issues whatsoever.
Posted on: 2012/5/14 8:21
|
|||
|
Re: Fuel Pump
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
john,
has anyone brought up, vacuum tester? open line at filter, hook up hand pump vacuum pump, and put line out in container, and pump up gas. that air bubble has to move. don't think it would help ceramic,, but you should get air bubble out. rik ps if gas won't go by pump (fuel) then go below. pss...have you tried to fill bowl before putting it together? (glass) bowl. or soak the ceramic in the bowl? with gas, then top off, and put it together.
Posted on: 2012/5/14 20:43
|
|||
Riki
|
||||
|
Re: Fuel Pump
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Thanks Riki, I too would prefer to get rid of all air in the system but it doesn't seem to be making much difference where it is. Nonetheless, I'll have a go at bleeding the inline filters as soon as I can. I'll keep you posted. Regards, John
Posted on: 2012/5/15 5:10
|
|||
|
Re: Fuel Pump
|
||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Home away from home
|
Quote:
Sorry Owen, I'm not an expert and don't have a perfect 20-year plus memory. There was no "casting" in the bowl cover, the filter press fit onto a metal tube (the filter was only open at one end). This setup provider a much larger, finer filter area than a ceramic type. It was OK, but still a hassle to remove the bowl for replacement. The bowl filter is a sediment bowl no matter where it's placed, (hence you clean what has settled into it once in a while, as you noted). I don't know about 1939 filters/bowls or double action pumps, but I suspect that those bowls were placed on the intake side of the pump to act as a pre-pump filter, as is recommended today with electric pumps. Some mechanical fuel pumps come with a bowl attached, glass or metal (1947 Dodge, for instance), which I doubt has any other filtering properties than to catch sediment and water. The presence of air in a glass sediment bowl/filter is an interesting phenomenon, but solving the question of why it's there isn't very helpful: as noted in my last post and again in a later one--even translucent in-line filters show "air space" and work fine. I'm sure there is air in the metal in-line filters as well, but we just don't see it.
Posted on: 2012/5/16 21:37
|
|||
Guy
[b]Not an Expert[/ |
||||
|