New Here?
Toggle Content
   

Toggle Content User Info
Welcome

Anonymous

Nickname
Password
Register

Membership:
Latest: Beduff1977
New Today: 0
New Yesterday: 0
Overall: 17134

Online Now [871]:
Visitors: 870
Bots: 1
Members: 0
Staff Online Now:

No staff members are online!
Page Views:
Today: 60729
Total: 107996008

Toggle Content Main Menu
 General Info Goodies Search Web Stats Members
 Donations

 

Forums ›

:: Forums ›
206 problem fuel tank
-> 206 Problems

#1: 206 problem fuel tank Author: ektor PostPosted: Sun Nov 11, 2012 2:41 am
    ----
If the fuel tank gets air inside is there any problem? if there is no air how much vacumm should be? thank you

#2: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 2:45 pm
    ----
air in the fuel lines isnt great, but what happens when you fill up with petrol do you think???

#3: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: ektor PostPosted: Mon Nov 12, 2012 4:57 pm
    ----
I have leak in fuel pump.when the car is turned om for 3 minutes the vacumm is 10 hg and after 3 minutes it goes 0 hg, when i turn off the car the vacumm decrassed immediatly.I want to know what kind of problem is this?thank you

#4: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Tue Nov 13, 2012 8:03 am
    ----
Is the car actualy running right?where do u see the leak?because its totaly normal to have air in the tank...the vaccum is at the engine i believe...ive had fuel leak problem and just renewed the plastic ring that holds the pump on the top of the tank...dealer part of around 10quid."

#5: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: ektor PostPosted: Wed Nov 14, 2012 12:13 pm
    ----
the car is running actualy, I connect the vacuum test gauge between fuel filter and injection pump model lucas DPC, when the engine was turned on,the vacuum was 10 nhg,and than when I turned off the engine I think that the vacuum should stay stationary, but it decrased immediatly. thank you

#6: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: macca1411, Location: Westhoughton, Lancashire PostPosted: Wed Nov 14, 2012 12:54 pm
    ----
Are you sure it's vacuum that it's measuring and not fuel pressure?

A vacuum has nothing in it, no air, no fluid. The pump will draw the fuel from the tank and push it along the fuel lines which will create the fuel pressure. Turn the engine off, the pump stops working and so the pressure will drop to zero.

Get a straw, cover one end with your finger and suck on the other. In theory, you're creating a vacuum in the straw. The straw will collapse in on itself. If this happened in your fuel system, the pipes would collapse and restrict the flow of fuel to the engine causing the engine to stall or run like a bag of s**t due to lack of fuel.

You need atmospheric pressure in the tank so that as the fuel is used by the engine, the space is filled, otherwise the pump will have to work much harder as the fuel in the tank decreases.


I have just searched Ektor and was hoping to find it was a translation for internet troll. Alas, I think you may be genuine. DOH!!!

#7: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Wed Nov 14, 2012 1:23 pm
    ----
U still havnt said where you think the leak is at...you do know that the fuel tank has a return pipe on it sending any unused fuel back to the tank?and is it pety or diesel?

#8: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Wed Nov 14, 2012 1:35 pm
    ----
i just think you want to show off because youve flukely found out what this measure hg means....there's no vaccum involved here.there is fuel pressure thanks to the fuel pump but no vaccum....the vaccum pump is for the brakes....not the fuel system.im just honest mate....sui me

#9: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: paul_c, Location: UK PostPosted: Wed Nov 14, 2012 2:49 pm
    ----
There is a slight vacuum in the tank, for emissions reasons.

#10: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Fri Nov 16, 2012 11:19 am
    ----
hows that then???i reallise the extraction of fuel by the pump would create a slight negative pressure in the tank but where does emmisions come into it?

#11: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: macca1411, Location: Westhoughton, Lancashire PostPosted: Fri Nov 16, 2012 12:27 pm
    ----
paul_c wrote:
There is a slight vacuum in the tank, for emissions reasons.

I've got a fully functioning breather pipe on my tank. It connects to the top of the tank and comes out near the filler cap. I'm not sure if the filler cap itself has a breather hole in it on a 206. I will have a look next time I fuel up.

#12: Re: 206 problem fuel tank Author: bezford, Location: darlington PostPosted: Fri Nov 16, 2012 4:56 pm
    ----
No the more i think about a vacuum in the fuel tank the more wrong it sounds....it would serve no purpose and every time u filled up takin the fuel cap off would give u a nasty shock as the vacuum was released...probably dangerouse aswell



-> 206 Problems


Page 1 of 1
 
We are not responsible for comments posted by our users, as they are the property of the poster
Interactive software released under GNU GPL, Code Credits, Privacy Policy