I was expecting to find crushed, collapsed, or old, vacuum collapsible hose to account for the random power loss. No such luck...Now I will have to
dig into the fuel tanks, which I guess I was going to do anyway. But now the possibilities have been narrowed down to the filter socks or pickup tubes
in the tanks,or the device in the wheelwell that looks maladjusted.
Apparently, someone has been here before. The fuel lines are 30R7 and still flexible enough to disconnect without damage. The vent lines were
stiff, the front tank filler neck hose snapped the paper thin nylon tee by the frame before I could get to the clamp even with my 18 inch extension.
That hose would not have let go of that tee anyway :lol: The filler neck vent hose barb on that tank is also apparently the fuel leak when I fill the
tanks and it drips out in front of the rear wheel for the first few hundred feet.
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/fuel-system/p67071-fill-pipe-26amp-3b-vent-tee.html
This the top of the rear (Main) tank
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/fuel-system/p67074-rear-tank-top.html
All ins and outs accounted for except the one with a bolt clamped in the stubby hose on the side. Generator feed is the right angle fitting at corner,
red capped port on top goes to filler neck vent. Sending unit has engine feed and canister lines. Anybody know what was the original purpose of the
port closed off by the hose and bolt?
There is also a device in series with the rear tank vent line that is located in the LR forward wheelwell,don't have a pic of that yet, but even
though the tank has 2 vents I wonder if it is the cause of the power loss. I think it's a gravity sensor to close the line between the tanks in case
you remain on a steep angle for a long enough time. I'm going to perform some tests on it and get a pic to post in a reply once the workload clears.
--
Terry Kelpien
ASE Master Technician
73 Glacier 260
Smithfield, Va.
dig into the fuel tanks, which I guess I was going to do anyway. But now the possibilities have been narrowed down to the filter socks or pickup tubes
in the tanks,or the device in the wheelwell that looks maladjusted.
Apparently, someone has been here before. The fuel lines are 30R7 and still flexible enough to disconnect without damage. The vent lines were
stiff, the front tank filler neck hose snapped the paper thin nylon tee by the frame before I could get to the clamp even with my 18 inch extension.
That hose would not have let go of that tee anyway :lol: The filler neck vent hose barb on that tank is also apparently the fuel leak when I fill the
tanks and it drips out in front of the rear wheel for the first few hundred feet.
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/fuel-system/p67071-fill-pipe-26amp-3b-vent-tee.html
This the top of the rear (Main) tank
http://www.gmcmhphotos.com/photos/fuel-system/p67074-rear-tank-top.html
All ins and outs accounted for except the one with a bolt clamped in the stubby hose on the side. Generator feed is the right angle fitting at corner,
red capped port on top goes to filler neck vent. Sending unit has engine feed and canister lines. Anybody know what was the original purpose of the
port closed off by the hose and bolt?
There is also a device in series with the rear tank vent line that is located in the LR forward wheelwell,don't have a pic of that yet, but even
though the tank has 2 vents I wonder if it is the cause of the power loss. I think it's a gravity sensor to close the line between the tanks in case
you remain on a steep angle for a long enough time. I'm going to perform some tests on it and get a pic to post in a reply once the workload clears.
--
Terry Kelpien
ASE Master Technician
73 Glacier 260
Smithfield, Va.