I recently replaced my leaky needle valves with new ones, now the gas won't run out of the tank fast enough to keep the engine running at high speeds. It flowed a lot of gas before with leaky needle valves. It seems that when the needle valves seal well air won't go through them and let gas run down fast enough. Also the 1/4" fuel line is too small to let air bubbles go back up through the fuel, so it stops flowing. I removed the vacuum operated valve and ran fuel line from the petcocks directly to the carbs to get the least restriction but it didn't help.
The vent hole isn't plugged but is a very small pin hole. If I go at 70 down the freeway it starts to miss and sputter like it's out of gas in just a few miles. If I check the fuel line it's empty. I tried driving with the fuel cap open and it helps the problem, fuel doesn't stop flowing but smell of fumes is pretty bad.
I had the same problem on my 750 Seca after rebuilding the carbs. I would drive about 15 miles and seem to run out of gas and have to stop and open the fuel cap for a few minutes and let more run down into the carbs. I replaced the old petcock with a high flow Pingel that has a big hole directly through it when it's open and put on a less restrictive inline filter. That helped a little bit so then I drilled a hole in the top of the tank and put in a fitting for a vent hose, like a dirt bike. I tried running the vent hose down by the steering stem but it didn't help. If I ran out of gas I could blow into the hose and force more fuel out of the tank and into the carbs. I realized that there is a large vacuum behind my fairing so it's not a good place to put a vent hose. I ran a longer hose under the tank and back behind the seat near the battery where there's not a vacuum and it works much better but still didn't solve the problem completely. It doesn't run out completely now but slows down to the point where there is just a trickle of fuel going down the fuel line but it's enough to keep the engine running. You would think that if there is a vent at the top of the tank and a large valve that's open at the bottom the fuel would run out in a large quantity but it don't work that way! It seems that to get the full volume to flow I need either an air pump to pressurize the tank or a fuel pump to suck it out at the bottom.
Does anyone know how to get fuel to flow out of the 1100 tank or am I going to have to drill a hole and put in a vent fitting in it too?
The vent hole isn't plugged but is a very small pin hole. If I go at 70 down the freeway it starts to miss and sputter like it's out of gas in just a few miles. If I check the fuel line it's empty. I tried driving with the fuel cap open and it helps the problem, fuel doesn't stop flowing but smell of fumes is pretty bad.
I had the same problem on my 750 Seca after rebuilding the carbs. I would drive about 15 miles and seem to run out of gas and have to stop and open the fuel cap for a few minutes and let more run down into the carbs. I replaced the old petcock with a high flow Pingel that has a big hole directly through it when it's open and put on a less restrictive inline filter. That helped a little bit so then I drilled a hole in the top of the tank and put in a fitting for a vent hose, like a dirt bike. I tried running the vent hose down by the steering stem but it didn't help. If I ran out of gas I could blow into the hose and force more fuel out of the tank and into the carbs. I realized that there is a large vacuum behind my fairing so it's not a good place to put a vent hose. I ran a longer hose under the tank and back behind the seat near the battery where there's not a vacuum and it works much better but still didn't solve the problem completely. It doesn't run out completely now but slows down to the point where there is just a trickle of fuel going down the fuel line but it's enough to keep the engine running. You would think that if there is a vent at the top of the tank and a large valve that's open at the bottom the fuel would run out in a large quantity but it don't work that way! It seems that to get the full volume to flow I need either an air pump to pressurize the tank or a fuel pump to suck it out at the bottom.
Does anyone know how to get fuel to flow out of the 1100 tank or am I going to have to drill a hole and put in a vent fitting in it too?
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