While on the subject of gas caps....

Should the cap on on the header tank (with the sight guage) be vented?  

Thanks,
Fred
---- Hartmut Beil <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

=============
Jim,
 
I experienced these bubbles myself.
 
After a closer inspection of the cap of the gauge tube , I could see that it 
was cracked and thus acting as a special vent.
Replacing the cap solved the problem until the new cap cracks again . They go 
away fast in the California sun
 
So the fix should be simple.
 
 
Hartmut


To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Sun, 18 Nov 2007 20:41:52 
-0500Subject: [ercoupe-tech] Re: Cowl fuel indicator




The last few times I've been aloft in my 415-C (4/46, #1286), the cowl tank 
quantity indicator, a glass tube, apparently, with a plastic cap, and the rod 
from below with an kind of ovoid shaped (looks metallic) topknot for one to see 
has been the scene of weird activity.The behavior is, after climb out, which 
can depress the indicator maybe 1/2" or so for a while, pumps back up on level 
off. Then all seems right with the world. After about 20' of this reverie, I 
would start to get bubbles coming into the bottom of the tube. This in the next 
10' to 20' it would get worse - it looks like a stinkin' coffee percolator, 
albeit no column of fuel seems to crawl up into the tube, but just lots and 
lots of bubbles. It seems to cause 0 ill effect, beyond the natural anxiety 
that any odd fuel system behavior might engender. After landing and subsequent 
climb out all seems fine until about another 20' pass.Background: I had a 
leaking terneplate tank that seemed incorrigible and John Wright, Jr. sold me a 
stainless steel custom made cowl tank which I had installed summer before last 
(2005). Roughly in that time frame I replaced the fuel tank gaskets with new 
ones from Mr. Cooper (100 Lotsa-Lead versions). All seemed ok. This "perking" 
effect I think I've only noticed in the past month or two (maybe more - my mind 
is gone). Seems totally nutty, as the top cap of the cowl glass seems to be 
sealed properly and no fuel escapes up and out. Oh, by the way, wing tanks are 
capped with float-wire-"meter"-caps with the obvious central vents. I leave 
them in as I keep it under a roof (I used to swap them with solid caps when it 
was tied down in the weather - I carry them along just in case).??????Jim 
BrennanNC63963 / #1286 / 4/26/46WST / RI 






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