The Big Hisssssss
Author
Discussion

attym3

Original Poster:

7,259 posts

191 months

Thursday 11th August 2011
quotequote all
When I fill my Eunos as I remove the cap I get a big hiss. I usually fill it to the top and fill when just under a quarter.
Anyone else get this or do I have a breather blocked/inop/faulty?

Mark

Munter

31,330 posts

264 months

Thursday 11th August 2011
quotequote all
Standard feature I believe. Not sure what the cause is (except obviously that a pressure difference must exist), but it's not a problem.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

215 months

Thursday 11th August 2011
quotequote all
It's just a pressure difference caused by the petrol in the tank being heated/cooled to ambient, isn't it?

I've noticed it in practically every car I've driven for the past few years.

Mr MXT

7,774 posts

306 months

Thursday 11th August 2011
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
It's just a pressure difference caused by the petrol in the tank being heated/cooled to ambient, isn't it?

I've noticed it in practically every car I've driven for the past few years.
I assumed it was the pressure difference changing as the tank empties i.e. negative pressure inside the tank, so its air rushing into the tank as you open the filler.

youngsyr

14,742 posts

215 months

Thursday 11th August 2011
quotequote all
Mr MXT said:
youngsyr said:
It's just a pressure difference caused by the petrol in the tank being heated/cooled to ambient, isn't it?

I've noticed it in practically every car I've driven for the past few years.
I assumed it was the pressure difference changing as the tank empties i.e. negative pressure inside the tank, so its air rushing into the tank as you open the filler.
That makes much more sense as logically filling an empty tank wouldn't have much petrol in it to cause pressure changes! banghead

tuttle

3,427 posts

260 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
Pretty sure it's the other way round, petrol being a high expansivity (is that a real word?)liquid. When you fill up with cold liquid petrol its volume is minimum. Tank empties, air in tank warms,Petrol vapour expands.

Edited by tuttle on Friday 12th August 09:30

youngsyr

14,742 posts

215 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
tuttle said:
Pretty sure it's the other way round, petrol being a high expansivity (is that a real word?)liquid. When you fill up with cold liquid petrol its volume is minimum. Tank empties, air in tank warms,Petrol vapour expands.

Edited by tuttle on Friday 12th August 09:30
Does the petrol vapour expand enough to more than replace the 50 litres or so of liquid petrol that has been removed from the tank though? I wouldn't have thought so.

Re "expansivity" I think the technical term you're looking for is "high coefficient of thermal expansion", but I could well be wrong as I've barely scratched the surface of understanding thermodynamics.

denniswise9

539 posts

180 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
Used to get an even bigger hiss on my Focus when I had that, nothing to worry about.

tuttle

3,427 posts

260 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
youngsyr said:
Does the petrol vapour expand enough to more than replace the 50 litres or so of liquid petrol that has been removed from the tank though? I wouldn't have thought so.

Re "expansivity" I think the technical term you're looking for is "high coefficient of thermal expansion", but I could well be wrong as I've barely scratched the surface of understanding thermodynamics.
You could well be right, & I am almost certainly musing out of my arse.
My thinking is going on no more expertise than schoolboy physics. Petrol=combustible liquid, therefore very high thermal coefficient thingy.
Rate of expansion for 1cm cubed of water is 1700:1 .Petrol must have a higher rate than that & becomes a vapour at much lower temperatures, so can easily effect pressure changes in an enclosed space i.e. 45 ltr petrol tank. IMHO smile

FWIW when I take my fuel cap off, air always seems to 'blow out'. Nothing to worry about.

MX-5 Lazza

7,954 posts

242 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
The hiss is air/fumes blowing out, not sucking in.
I think it's something to do with emission control i.e. petrol tanks aren't allowed to be vented to air. There is a vent but that goes through a charcoal filter and into the intake manifold, I guess to burn up excess tank pressure. If the tank wasn't pressurised somehow then without being vented the pump would quickly fail to be able to pump fuel and the car would stall. I'm not sure where the pressure comes from though. Maybe one of our friendly mechanics could enlighten us smile

youngsyr

14,742 posts

215 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
Right, I need to know the answer to this, so I'm putting it out to the wider PH massive:

http://www.pistonheads.com/gassing/topic.asp?h=0&a...

tuttle

3,427 posts

260 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
Again, I'm just inexpertly musing here.

If fuel draining from a tank caused significant vacuum, would it cause the engine to stall as the pump would struggle to apply pressure?


http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/resources/DPReport...

attym3

Original Poster:

7,259 posts

191 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
Mr MXT said:
I assumed it was the pressure difference changing as the tank empties i.e. negative pressure inside the tank, so its air rushing into the tank as you open the filler.
This what I always thought, but some of the answers on here have got me thinking maybe that's wrong.

Mark

Mr MXT

7,774 posts

306 months

Friday 12th August 2011
quotequote all
We all have too much time on our hands.