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Thread: How accurate are servo pumps?

  1. #21
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    Drain the hose

    Quote Originally Posted by paulthepilot_5 View Post
    I like this idea I reckon i i could just about fill my bike with the fuel left in the hose
    ____________________________________

    When I first owned a car, this practise was very common with the type of bowser we had in those days , shut the pump off them drain the hose Have not tried it of late , dont think it would work with the new bowsers/ hose nozzels

    Hodgo

  2. #22
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    hi
    dont know about the d1, but the d2.....you can often put at least about 4 to 5 litres more in it after the pump clicks off.have dribbled 95 litres in mine& it was not empty
    also pump flow calibration....is it done at full flow or at different flows?

    if you dribble fuel in,particularly diesel,it can get frothy.will this affect the calibration of the pump?

    cheers

  3. #23
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    Quote Originally Posted by scarry View Post
    ....also pump flow calibration....is it done at full flow or at different flows?

    if you dribble fuel in,particularly diesel,it can get frothy.will this affect the calibration of the pump?

    cheers
    full flow, looped back to the main tank and gas/air/bubbles in the line don't affect it...

  4. #24
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    Quote Originally Posted by p38arover View Post
    I also complained (to the servo) about another Woolies Caltex servo. I had been running a particular LPG tank for a couple of years and I alway ran it "dry". I consistently got 54 litres in to it (+/- 0.5 litre). Yet at this Woollies servo on Epping Rd, I got significantly more (about 6 litres). They denied their pump could be faulty.
    Ron,
    With lpg it all depends on the day and weather. I know in my Rangie on a hot day I would get 100-105 litres in from bone dry. On a freezing cold morning at 0430 often would get 120 litres in. There is also some expansion in lpg itself so on a hot day you may get a little less than you think and on a cold day a bit more. Not much but a bit. I know on a cold morning if I filled up and it was going to be a warm day I would only fill until it was one bar under full and when I would come out in the arvo after sitting in the sun would show full. Same happens with petrol to a lesser degree due to specific gravity and expansion rates. Normally within guidelines, so a pump may in fact be giving you the right volume, but when it cools at night may be a bit less.
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  5. #25
    p38arover's Avatar
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    BUt it's going in as a liquid, not a gas. The shut off is a float valve, not a pressure valve. (I know 'cos I've pulled them out. If you adjust the float you can get more LPG in. Seriously, I was once told that by an LPG fitter. I haven't done it.)
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  6. #26
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    Quote Originally Posted by CraigE View Post
    Ron,
    With lpg it all depends on the day and weather. I know in my Rangie on a hot day I would get 100-105 litres in from bone dry. On a freezing cold morning at 0430 often would get 120 litres in. g in the sun would show full. Same happens with petrol to a lesser degree due to specific gravity and expansion rates.....
    Yes never buy LPG from a servo with an above ground tank on a hot day, you get less bang for your buck.

    Petrol expanding, isn't that why servos try to get their deliveries at night so they get what they are paying for?

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  7. #27
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    Quote Originally Posted by scarry View Post
    hi
    dont know about the d1, but the d2.....you can often put at least about 4 to 5 litres more in it after the pump clicks off.have dribbled 95 litres in mine.

    cheers
    So, at least I am not the only one.

    Same thing happened to me...

  8. #28
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    From memory in our F250s you could dribble fill another 13L or so after it clicked off. Think they had a 120L tank.

    In my Disco1 with LPG manifold floor tank I can only usually fit 45-47L when it is totally empty. Sometimes 55L though. I thought it was a 55L useable tank. Never taken any notice of temp etc when it happens but it is annoying considering how small the tank is to begin with.
    If it does only get 45-47L it drops from 4 lights (max lights) to 3 lights pretty quickly so obviously not full. I suspect the float shut off is faulty but I'm just guessing.

  9. #29
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    Quote Originally Posted by p38arover View Post
    If you adjust the float you can get more LPG in. Seriously, I was once told that by an LPG fitter. I haven't done it.)
    i wouldnt do this as on a hot day the pressure relief on the tank may go off

    now that would be exciting

  10. #30
    Gaz_Series6202 Guest
    Also with the LPG filling, Barametric pressure(Altitude wise) comes into effect, in my granfathers 110" He has a 90L Tank and up in the moutains we can get 100L in it. More on a realy cold day.

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