Pretty much what the title says. When I fuel my boat and when the tank is near full gas sprays rather violently from the vent line. The first time it happened I was caught completely unaware and was drenched from foot to knee on one leg.
The set up is pretty simple. I have a 1965 Clipper Craft 16 ft. runabout. The fuel tank is an aluminum 18 gallon. The vent line looks to be somewhere around 1/2" hose and the nipple sticks straight up from the tank. The vent fitting is the standard type with a hole in it pinting aft and downward and it is on the side of the boat a few inches down from the cap. Likewise with the filler neck which is whatever the standard fuel filler hose size is. Both nipples are on the port side of the tank. They are fairly close to each other, something around a couple of inches.
Is there a way to minimize the issue? Is there a special fitting or a trap of some type that would reduce the pressure or maybe a check valve of some sort?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.
The set up is pretty simple. I have a 1965 Clipper Craft 16 ft. runabout. The fuel tank is an aluminum 18 gallon. The vent line looks to be somewhere around 1/2" hose and the nipple sticks straight up from the tank. The vent fitting is the standard type with a hole in it pinting aft and downward and it is on the side of the boat a few inches down from the cap. Likewise with the filler neck which is whatever the standard fuel filler hose size is. Both nipples are on the port side of the tank. They are fairly close to each other, something around a couple of inches.
Is there a way to minimize the issue? Is there a special fitting or a trap of some type that would reduce the pressure or maybe a check valve of some sort?
Any suggestions would be appreciated.