detecting leaks in fuel lines

Dec 5, 2007
144
Vega friends,

I have an outboard with two fuel tanks and a central water filter. I believe I've gotten an air leak in one of my lines either between one of the two tanks and the filter or between the filter and the fitting for the line that connects to the outboard. When I tried to pump fuel up to the outboard, I got nothing. I tried two different external lines with built in primer bulbs; neither worked. When I attached one of them to my portable auxilary tank it primed right away. All the fuel lines run under the deck.Any ideas?
Bruce
S/v Cygnet #169
 
Jan 31, 2009
122
Attach the portable tank to the next join away from the engine to see if it runs , if it does move away to next join and continue step by step approach until engine fails to pull fuel through. There is your problem. I once had a persistent air leak that I couldn't seem to solve but by adopting this method eventually showed me that the air hole was in the fuel pipe inside the tank and once identified was easily cured.
Hope this helps
Mike
________________________________
From: JOSEPH BERGMAN jbergman888@...
To: AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, 9 July 2012, 19:32
Subject: [AlbinVega] detecting leaks in fuel lines

Vega friends,

I have an outboard with two fuel tanks and a central water filter. I believe I've gotten an air leak in one of my lines either between one of the two tanks and the filter or between the filter and the fitting for the line that connects to the outboard. When I tried to pump fuel up to the outboard, I got nothing. I tried two different external lines with built in primer bulbs; neither worked. When I attached one of them to my portable auxilary tank it primed right away. All the fuel lines run under the deck.Any ideas?
Bruce
S/v Cygnet #169
 
Dec 5, 2007
144
Bravo!! Excellent!!! I will give it a go.

To: AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com
From: mikeandv@...
Date: Mon, 9 Jul 2012 22:20:52 +0100
Subject: Re: [AlbinVega] detecting leaks in fuel lines





Attach the portable tank to the next join away from the engine to see if it runs , if it does move away to next join and continue step by step approach until engine fails to pull fuel through. There is your problem.
I once had a persistent air leak that I couldn't seem to solve but by adopting this method eventually showed me that the air hole was in the fuel pipe inside the tank and once identified was easily cured.

Hope this helps

Mike
________________________________

From: JOSEPH BERGMAN jbergman888@...

To: AlbinVega@yahoogroups.com

Sent: Monday, 9 July 2012, 19:32

Subject: [AlbinVega] detecting leaks in fuel lines



Vega friends,
I have an outboard with two fuel tanks and a central water filter. I believe I've gotten an air leak in one of my lines either between one of the two tanks and the filter or between the filter and the fitting for the line that connects to the outboard. When I tried to pump fuel up to the outboard, I got nothing. I tried two different external lines with built in primer bulbs; neither worked. When I attached one of them to my portable auxilary tank it primed right away. All the fuel lines run under the deck.
Any ideas?

Bruce

S/v Cygnet #169