kyamon
Active Member
- Posts
- 114
- Location
- Lausanne, Switzerland
Hello
I am in the process of replacing the fuel tank on my '74 6-cyl S3 109 (the old one was leaking and full of sand...). The replacement part has arrived but it turns out I did not get the exact same model as was installed previously (stupid mistake; I was confused some of the indications online and did not compare sufficiently carefully) - the difference being the number of pipes sticking out. My old one has four pipes on top (plus the hole for the sender unit), the new one only has three. It seems that the dimensions of the two tanks are the same, so fitting the new one should be possible.
My question is about the connectivity, however. On the old one I have one venting pipe (connecting to the filler), one pipe connecting to the pump, and one that connects the two "sections" of the tank, to prevent one side to be at under-pressurised. How is this done when there are only three connections, what are the three for?
For completeness, here are the two models in question:
My old tank is like this one: https://www.famousfour.co.uk/new_parts/ff_part?part=18412
The new one is this one: https://www.johncraddockltd.co.uk/s...m/599233-fuel-tank-petrol-rear-1975-1984.html
Cheers,
Andreas
I am in the process of replacing the fuel tank on my '74 6-cyl S3 109 (the old one was leaking and full of sand...). The replacement part has arrived but it turns out I did not get the exact same model as was installed previously (stupid mistake; I was confused some of the indications online and did not compare sufficiently carefully) - the difference being the number of pipes sticking out. My old one has four pipes on top (plus the hole for the sender unit), the new one only has three. It seems that the dimensions of the two tanks are the same, so fitting the new one should be possible.
My question is about the connectivity, however. On the old one I have one venting pipe (connecting to the filler), one pipe connecting to the pump, and one that connects the two "sections" of the tank, to prevent one side to be at under-pressurised. How is this done when there are only three connections, what are the three for?
For completeness, here are the two models in question:
My old tank is like this one: https://www.famousfour.co.uk/new_parts/ff_part?part=18412
The new one is this one: https://www.johncraddockltd.co.uk/s...m/599233-fuel-tank-petrol-rear-1975-1984.html
Cheers,
Andreas