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They make one way valves for this, that let air in but no gas out.  Caveat: If you park your car for a long time when weather is warm and the tank is not full, but has some gas and some air/vapor inside and it gets cold (winter storage), air will go in from outside.  Then if it gets warm again, that vapor mixture will try to expand and cant get out --- unless it has enough pressure to defeat the fuel pump and the float valve in the carb.  If the tank was pretty empty, lots of vapor will result in lots of pressure build-up. Then the carb will flood bigtime, and that gas can get right into the engine, fill up the crankcase.  If you miss that happening, and fire up that engine in the warmer spring air you can cause much excitement, due to copious smoke.  Ask me how I know ... N.B.: I take the rubber tube (without the one-way valve) at the top of the tank, and run it down the side of the tank for a bit then turn it back up, making a big U trap.  That pretty much takes care of the slopping out of gas through the open tube.  Try that, might work for you, or at least minimize the problem.  If you fill it to the tippy top, you are going to get some gas smell more than likely.  Further: its a good idea to top the tank off before winter storage -- and toss in some SeaFoam a few miles before you button it up.  Or . . . live in sunny SoCali and just forget about ever getting really cold, just drive it all the time.

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This has been a known issue for years with older Vintage Speedsters, but is easy to fix.

Fuel is sloshing out the vent tube and dribbling down in the wheel well under the car.

An easy fix is to replace the hose with one that's much longer and that can be looped up high inside the wheel well.

Click this link for some discussion on an earlier thread. Further searching here will reveal many similar threads.

Last edited by Sacto Mitch

That is NOT an "overflow" tube.  The small tube on the side of the filler neck is a breather to let air into the tank as fuel is used by the engine.  If left just as a hose, there is nothing to prevent fuel from running out on cornering when the tank is full (as you've noticed).  

The positive cure, regardless of the length of the breather hose, is to install a check valve in that breather hose more-or-less close to the filler neck (within a couple of feet).  There are a bunch of them with varying flow rates.  I use one of these from Dorman:

https://www.amazon.com/Dorman-...gid=pla-570433919734

When you get it, blow through each end.  One way will not let you blow through it, while the other direction will.  Put it in the hose so you can blow through it into the tank.  That will let air flow in, while preventing gas from flowing out.

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I should like to point out that I have no valve.

Not a high pressure valve nor a low pressure valve.

Not an inside out valve. Not an outside in valve.

I have no valve at all.

I also have no gas fumes.

What I have is a hose.

It has two ends and a middle.

It does not matter which end connects to the tank as long as the other end does not connect to the tank.

By virtue of the hollow nature of the hose it relieves pressure in any condition. When it’s hot and when it’s not. When it’s humid and when it’s dry. When it’s summer and when it’s winter. Day or night. Rain or shine.

My hose is a simple device.

It has no moving parts.

I do not like valves in a house.

I do not like valves in a mouse.

I do not like them here or there.

I do not like them anywhere.

I do not like green valves and ham.

I do not like them, Mitch-I-am.

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@RH3 posted:

WOW! I just purchased my car and already i have a whole community that can support me!

i really like all the input.

the car is on Maui so i don't have the significant weather variations.

i will try to come up with some other attempts to stump the stars,

Bob

If you live in Kihei, I need to buy you a beer. Maui Brewing Company? PM me so I can get up to speed on your marvelous new acquisition!

Pressure build-up, as described, is real, it happened to me, and sets up if: you have a one-way valve, a fair amount of vapor in the tank and temperature swings are significant, like you park it on a 70 degree day, and over the winter it goes below freezing, then warms up to 70 again. Looping the tube without the one way valve, as described, limits slosh problems.  Ed says pinch the tube -- Ed is always doing clear thinking.  Or get a Spyder gas cap -- I like that too.

Speeduino with CB Performance throttle bodies. It's not a "kit" or a "buy-and-fire-up" thing. I bought every part and piece, plumbed it, built the harness, programmed it and tuned it.

I used a UA4C ECU from Weaver Markel(WTM). Surface mount boards assembled in USA. You have to solder the pins for Arduino(8-bit computer), solder board options, a VR conditioner, and an IAC controller if you're using one.

https://wtmtronics.com/product/ua4c-for-speeduino/

It's a big project, not for the timid.

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