Results 1 to 3 of 3

Thread: Fuel/Air Separator

Threaded View

  1. #3
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    San Rafael, CA
    Posts
    3,621
    Lo Craig, There sure is a whole parade of bottles of cleaning and scrubbing and polishing stuff one can buy to lubricate the boat. Most of it can't be all that good for the water. I've used some low sudsing biodegradable liquids, thinking I might be forgiven - but it sure feels funny watching the trail of bubbles. Not so funny when some stranger is watching the same plume. I'm sure any detergent is as bad as the oil is for the birds and fish. Having that absorbant ring around the fill at least psychologically would be good.

    You put it in the garbage on shore where it's taken to the dump. Then it enters the same water by a more devious but legal method.

    The LG100 is successful they say because the design interrupts the shot of fuel entering the vent and acts as an accumulator or reservoir as the air separates and vacates. The fuel that wants to get out has an alternative place to go in the chamber as it falls back into the tank. It also happens quick enough so that the automatic shutoff on the nozzle activates befor you can overfill the tank, no matter what size it is - like a small sailboat fuel tank - or how fast its coming out of the pump. That's what I understand. Of course you are trying to be more guarded in your filling (especially when you "hear the tune changing") - and you are trying to remember how much you have to fill - and the kick-off at the nozzle BETTER work - etc. If this device is for real, then it seems well worth the price for a whole lot less twitching.

    The Racor device compared to the double fuel fill invention that requires an overflow tube between the two seems preferable - altho it will take up more space. Seems more suited to us sailboaters too???

    Thinking that mounting the LG100 at the vent as it exits the tank, continuing the vent up and out, is the best way. Get separation immediately at the tank. Any ideas on this? And where do you terminate the vent? Lead it up a stanchion??? Where the vent ends has always been a problem, because IF fuel gets out THERE you don't want it to create problems or fire hazard - nor do you want water to enter either???

    Makes one wonder why an expansion chamber/vent has never been designed into builtin tanks as a matter of course. It would be a small box or sphere on top of the main tank where the separation of air and fuel would occur just like the Racor LG100.
    Last edited by ebb; 03-16-2005 at 08:15 AM.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts