It seems like a simple question. And I am pretty simple, so it fits. But maybe not so.
I've been futzing with my petcocks for, like, ever. They were leaking and leaving pools of gas under my bike. I know, better than in the oil, but still not a recipe for domestic tranquility, what with the fumes drifting into the house. I've replaced the gaskets and bent the washers, like the tech tip says to do. I've had the tank off the bike for a couple days with fuel lines attached the the petcocks to see if the leaking has stopped. It almost has.
Overnight I will get a trickle of gas collecting in the looped fuel lines. Is this the closest I can expect to sealing these suckers off? Are the needle valves supposed to stop the rest? I hate trusting needle valves. They lure you into a sense of complacency and then stab you in the back.
I really wish these had a shut off.
Patrick
I've been futzing with my petcocks for, like, ever. They were leaking and leaving pools of gas under my bike. I know, better than in the oil, but still not a recipe for domestic tranquility, what with the fumes drifting into the house. I've replaced the gaskets and bent the washers, like the tech tip says to do. I've had the tank off the bike for a couple days with fuel lines attached the the petcocks to see if the leaking has stopped. It almost has.
Overnight I will get a trickle of gas collecting in the looped fuel lines. Is this the closest I can expect to sealing these suckers off? Are the needle valves supposed to stop the rest? I hate trusting needle valves. They lure you into a sense of complacency and then stab you in the back.
I really wish these had a shut off.
Patrick
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