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Farmall & IHC Tractors Discussion Forum
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vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H

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Chris

08-26-2003 19:09:20




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I have and Farmall H when I open the gas on the setiment bowl the gas just drips out. So I took the bowl off, when I did so the gas ran out in a nice soild stream like it sould. Tightened up the bowl and the gas drip out of the tank slowly again. It acks like a vaccum, but I remove the gas cap and no change. What would cause this vaccum?




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Dan

08-27-2003 07:06:13




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 Re: vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H in reply to Chris, 08-26-2003 19:09:20  
Have the same problem with the sediment bown on my smta. Guess it just means things are working right. If you start it up everything works fine



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Steve - IN

08-26-2003 21:13:57




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 Re: vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H in reply to Chris, 08-26-2003 19:09:20  
Chris,

Eureka, Archemedies. Air displaces water, sometimes.

The air in the line had to go somewhere. You're not giving the air a place to go unless you open the float bowl, like BobM said.

As the comedian in the Catskills said - Everybody has got to be somewhere. The gas out of the tank has to displace the air in the fuel line. If air has nowhere to go, it doesn't let new gas in the sediment bowl. Everybody has to be somewhere. So either let the gas be consumed by the engine, or let the air bleed out through the float bowl.

Moral of the story is -- basic law of physics: two thing cannot occupy the same place at the same time. Simple as that. Fractured fairy tales.

P.S. I also have an H. The fuel line is not a vacuum; it's like a subway in Tokyo during rush hour - -there's no place for the air to escape, and each Japanese - like each air molecule - can only be squeezed so hard.

Additional reference is Archimedes around 1900 years ago as to why iron boats can float and gravity feed fuel systems only go so far.

Have fun with the H. That's the main thing. They are super tractors.

Steve

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Bob M

08-26-2003 19:19:43




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 Re: vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H in reply to Chris, 08-26-2003 19:09:20  
Chris - That's normal. If the carb bowl is full (so the float needle valve is shut), flow into an empty sediment bulb will range from slow drip to not at all - it's simply the carb float doing it's job.

If you want proof try this: Remove the drain plug from the bottom of the carb bowl, then open the sediment bowl valve. The sediment bulb will fill almost instantly to replace the gas flowing out of the carb drain.

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Jon

08-26-2003 19:16:00




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 Re: vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H in reply to Chris, 08-26-2003 19:09:20  
Try loosining the sediment bowl a littl, turn on the gas till it runs out the top of the bowl then tighten it back up while the gas is running out.Have done this with mine for years and always works



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meihman

08-27-2003 08:40:17




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 Re: Re: vaccum on my seditment bowl on an H in reply to Jon, 08-26-2003 19:16:00  
just start the tractor. the sediment bowl will fill when the carburetor needs it. the bowl is full and the float needle is shut.



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