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-   -   Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/257988-fuel-leak-where-line-enters-fuel-tank.html)

k-man August 14th 08 07:30 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
Hi. I hope this is the right group to post this question. I have a
weed whacker/trimmer and the fuel line goes from the carb into the
fuel tank via a hole in the fuel tank (instead of there being a
connector on the fuel tank). Original fuel line was OK in that it was
thick and filled the hole pretty well. I had a replace the fuel line
and while the new line appeared to be the same outer diameter of the
original fuel line, fuel is managing to leak out of the tank from the
hole through which the fuel line enters. I guess I could try to find
thicker fuel line; but the stuff I just installed was difficult enough
to get through the hole. My question is does anyone know of a good
way to seal the apparent gap (not easily visible other than of course
the fuel leaking out) between the fuel line and the tank? I tried
silicone; but that does not appear to be fuel/oil-resistant (trimmer
is 2-cycle).

Thanks.
Kevin

Eric in North TX August 14th 08 07:48 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
On Aug 14, 1:30*pm, k-man wrote:
Hi. *I hope this is the right group to post this question. *I have a
weed whacker/trimmer and the fuel line goes from the carb into the
fuel tank via a hole in the fuel tank (instead of there being a
connector on the fuel tank). *Original fuel line was OK in that it was
thick and filled the hole pretty well. *I had a replace the fuel line
and while the new line appeared to be the same outer diameter of the
original fuel line, fuel is managing to leak out of the tank from the
hole through which the fuel line enters. *I guess I could try to find
thicker fuel line; but the stuff I just installed was difficult enough
to get through the hole. *My question is does anyone know of a good
way to seal the apparent gap (not easily visible other than of course
the fuel leaking out) between the fuel line and the tank? *I tried
silicone; but that does not appear to be fuel/oil-resistant (trimmer
is 2-cycle).

Thanks.
Kevin


A good mower shop should have the correct fuel line, I have to go to
the next town south for mine,
but none of the big box store stuff works. I've tried just about
everything to seal the leak from a too small hose, and haven't yet
found anything that works..

MLD August 14th 08 09:19 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 

"k-man" wrote in message
...
Hi. I hope this is the right group to post this question. I have a
weed whacker/trimmer and the fuel line goes from the carb into the
fuel tank via a hole in the fuel tank (instead of there being a
connector on the fuel tank). Original fuel line was OK in that it was
thick and filled the hole pretty well. I had a replace the fuel line
and while the new line appeared to be the same outer diameter of the
original fuel line, fuel is managing to leak out of the tank from the
hole through which the fuel line enters. I guess I could try to find
thicker fuel line; but the stuff I just installed was difficult enough
to get through the hole. My question is does anyone know of a good
way to seal the apparent gap (not easily visible other than of course
the fuel leaking out) between the fuel line and the tank? I tried
silicone; but that does not appear to be fuel/oil-resistant (trimmer
is 2-cycle).

Try some epoxy-I fixed a leaky mower fuel tank with some.
MLD
Thanks.
Kevin



dpb August 14th 08 09:33 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
MLD wrote:
....
... My question is does anyone know of a good
way to seal the apparent gap (not easily visible other than of course
the fuel leaking out) between the fuel line and the tank? I tried
silicone; but that does not appear to be fuel/oil-resistant (trimmer
is 2-cycle).

Try some epoxy-I fixed a leaky mower fuel tank with some.

....

At the possible expense of making a future replacement nearly impossible.

I'm w/ the other poster who recommended getting the proper fuel line
from the OEM.

Alternatively, depending on the style/shape of tank, etc., could
possibly find and install a bulkhead connector so could have the
external fitting.

--

Steve Barker DLT August 14th 08 10:27 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
get the proper tygon hose and you will not have a leak. It's the
transparent yellow looking hose available at the small engine shops.

s


"k-man" wrote in message
...
Hi. I hope this is the right group to post this question. I have a
weed whacker/trimmer and the fuel line goes from the carb into the
fuel tank via a hole in the fuel tank (instead of there being a
connector on the fuel tank). Original fuel line was OK in that it was
thick and filled the hole pretty well. I had a replace the fuel line
and while the new line appeared to be the same outer diameter of the
original fuel line, fuel is managing to leak out of the tank from the
hole through which the fuel line enters. I guess I could try to find
thicker fuel line; but the stuff I just installed was difficult enough
to get through the hole. My question is does anyone know of a good
way to seal the apparent gap (not easily visible other than of course
the fuel leaking out) between the fuel line and the tank? I tried
silicone; but that does not appear to be fuel/oil-resistant (trimmer
is 2-cycle).

Thanks.
Kevin




KC August 15th 08 04:48 AM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
On Aug 14, 4:27*pm, "Steve Barker DLT"
wrote:
get the proper tygon hose and you will not have a leak. *It's the
transparent yellow looking hose available at the small engine shops.

s

Agree. The trick to getting it through the hole 'easily' is to cut
the end at a narrow "v" about 3/8" or more. Poke the end through the
hole as far as it will go, go in through the fuel cap hole with a pair
of forceps or long nose pliers, grasp the fuel line, and pull it
through as much as you need. It pulls a lot easier than trying to
push it.

KC


Nick Hull August 15th 08 01:09 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
In article
,
KC wrote:

On Aug 14, 4:27*pm, "Steve Barker DLT"
wrote:
get the proper tygon hose and you will not have a leak. *It's the
transparent yellow looking hose available at the small engine shops.

s

Agree. The trick to getting it through the hole 'easily' is to cut
the end at a narrow "v" about 3/8" or more. Poke the end through the
hole as far as it will go, go in through the fuel cap hole with a pair
of forceps or long nose pliers, grasp the fuel line, and pull it
through as much as you need. It pulls a lot easier than trying to
push it.


I cut the end in a LONG diagonal, maybe 2". Real EZ to feed thru the
hole and pull, costs little.

Free men own guns - www(dot)geocities(dot)com/CapitolHill/5357/

k-man August 20th 08 07:17 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
On Aug 15, 8:09*am, nick hull wrote:
In article
,

*KC wrote:
On Aug 14, 4:27*pm, "Steve Barker DLT"
wrote:
get the proper tygon hose and you will not have a leak. *It's the
transparent yellow looking hose available at the small engine shops.


s


*Agree. *The trick to getting it through the hole 'easily' is to cut
the end at a narrow "v" about 3/8" or more. *Poke the end through the
hole as far as it will go, go in through the fuel cap hole with a pair
of forceps or long nose pliers, grasp the fuel line, and pull it
through as much as you need. *It pulls a lot easier than trying to
push it.


I cut the end in a LONG diagonal, maybe 2". *Real EZ to feed thru the
hole and pull, costs little.

Free men own guns - www(dot)geocities(dot)com/CapitolHill/5357/


Thank you all. Sounds like replacing using the right fuel line is the
way to go.

Thanks.
Kevin

k-man September 25th 08 04:30 PM

Fuel leak where line enters fuel tank
 
On Aug 20, 2:17*pm, k-man wrote:
On Aug 15, 8:09*am, nick hull wrote:



In article
,


*KC wrote:
On Aug 14, 4:27*pm, "Steve Barker DLT"
wrote:
get the proper tygon hose and you will not have a leak. *It's the
transparent yellow looking hose available at the small engine shops..


s


*Agree. *The trick to getting it through the hole 'easily' is to cut
the end at a narrow "v" about 3/8" or more. *Poke the end through the
hole as far as it will go, go in through the fuel cap hole with a pair
of forceps or long nose pliers, grasp the fuel line, and pull it
through as much as you need. *It pulls a lot easier than trying to
push it.


I cut the end in a LONG diagonal, maybe 2". *Real EZ to feed thru the
hole and pull, costs little.


Free men own guns - www(dot)geocities(dot)com/CapitolHill/5357/


Thank you all. *Sounds like replacing using the right fuel line is the
way to go.

Thanks.
Kevin


Wound up getting some fuel line from a small engine parts shop via
mail order. The line was "black" and described to fit the
Homelite's. Nice quality line; but it was just slightly too thick.
Couldn't push it through at all. Did the long, diagonal cut but the
line simply kept on stretching if I tried to pull it through. I wound
up drilling out the tank holes slightly and that did the trick. Took
several minutes to push the return line in and to push the intake line
through the tank far enough so that I could reach the end to put the
fuel filter on it! Took a while but ideally the fix is DONE and
should stay done for a long while. Trimmer works great now.

Thanks again for the tips.

Kevin


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