Fill fuel from a separate can.
Maybe I am just paranoid, but there is NO WAY I will EVER bring that pressurised gasoline hose on board my boat. Blame me for having grown up working inventory control; but the method I prefer is to fill a 2-1/2-gallon plastic gasoline can at the dock, lift it down into the cockpit, and fill at the deck pipe using a funnel. Even having to repeat the process half a dozen times, this has a couple of major advantages.1. I control the flow, not the overzealous mechanics who souped up the fuel pump at the dock.2. The long nozzle does not threaten to shove loose or burst through the hose clamped on the other end of the deck plate. (I have pipe on mine anyway.)3. I know exactly how much fuel I am putting into the tank, simply by counting canfulls-- or partial canfulls.4. Perhaps best of all-- if I ever spill any, it amounts to 2-1/2 gallons, not as much as the fuel pump wants to gush out all over the cockpit seat and deck and sole and my feet and into the bilge and the harbour at something over 50 gallons per minute.Also, you always have the emptied gas can on the boat, so you can always hike to a nearby gas station on the road, where the fuel is cheaper, or the place is more likely to be open, rather than count on exorbitant and unreliable terms of the marina gas dock. 2-1/2 gallons weighs 15 lbs-- NOT the end of the world especially if you keep on board a motorised folding scooter with a milk-crate bolted on back.This boat's tank is only 12 gallons so I doubt very much I will ever use more than four or five canfulls to take on enough gasoline for any trip that has to be made between gas docks.JC 2