buffetspoorcousin
Recruit
- Joined
- Apr 5, 2024
- Messages
- 2
Hi All!
I moved to the Netherlands and bought my first small outboard engine boat last year. Complete newbie to all this, enjoyed my first summer, and i'm just about to get her out of winter storage. Thinking of a couple of things from my time last summer, i wanted to check if this was "normal" or whether I am doing something wrong.
The set up is a mercury 20 EFI outboard engine, with the male barb quick connector on my plastic quicksilver fuel tank and the female quick connector at the end of the fuel hose. When refuelling, i simply unclip the male to female with no issues. However, when i go back to couple them together after filling the tank to the safe level marker, fuel tends to spurt out of the female connector as i'm pushing them back together. Anything i can do to prevent this? Once its connected there isnt a fuel leak, but the process of connecting them causes some fuel to spurt into the underseat fuel tank location, and thus keeps a strong smell of fuel there.
I moved to the Netherlands and bought my first small outboard engine boat last year. Complete newbie to all this, enjoyed my first summer, and i'm just about to get her out of winter storage. Thinking of a couple of things from my time last summer, i wanted to check if this was "normal" or whether I am doing something wrong.
The set up is a mercury 20 EFI outboard engine, with the male barb quick connector on my plastic quicksilver fuel tank and the female quick connector at the end of the fuel hose. When refuelling, i simply unclip the male to female with no issues. However, when i go back to couple them together after filling the tank to the safe level marker, fuel tends to spurt out of the female connector as i'm pushing them back together. Anything i can do to prevent this? Once its connected there isnt a fuel leak, but the process of connecting them causes some fuel to spurt into the underseat fuel tank location, and thus keeps a strong smell of fuel there.
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