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#11
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Hi all,
I have a 1990 Alfa 164, 1996 Alfa 145, and 1996 Fiat Coupe Turbo. The only car that doesn't have too many problems with fuel delivery is the older Alfa 164. We've also owned a few Alfasuds and another 145. They all suffered from the same cut-off problem. It may well be that the faster modern pumps deliver fuel far too quickly for the plumbing to manage! I live in New Zealand, where fuel is NZ$1.17 (41p) per litre of 96, and the pumps do seem to delivery fuel faster with each upgrade of the bowsers. http://www.petrolpricewatch.co.nz Cheers, Don. "Craig" > wrote in message om... > I have this problem with my 164 and also with several other cars > including my previous Lancia. It does seem to be more of a problem at > some filling stations than others. I beleive it is in part due to the > increased delivery rate of modern pumps. The litre meter seems to > whirl round faster and faster every time a filling station is > refitted. I tend to only partly squeeze the trigger to slow the > delivery rate and also lift the hose slack so that there is less > hanging down the side of the car. I have tried the trick of turning > the nozzle sideways or upside down with varying degrees of success but > for me lifting the slack in the hose upwards seems to work well. I > have no idea why it should be so though. > Craig |
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#12
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>
> for petrol in the UK, we don't get no choice. Locking nozzles are > banned. You have to stand there with trigger held in for "Safety" > reasons. > > I think it is because it stops fuel getting spilled if the vac/pressure > autocuttoff fails (I had that actually happen at a pump once, and ended > up with a petrol soaked shoe). The solution to the lack of locking nozzles is to jam the filler cap inside the handle. The 156 cap works a treat. Fuel station operatives tend not to like you doing it for the reasons you mention (possible spillage) so I tend not to wander too far. Most petrol stations have such slow pumps that it does save you having to hold the handle for ages. Best regards Joe 156 2.0l TS |
#13
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"Joe Ortiz" > wrote in message om... > > > > for petrol in the UK, we don't get no choice. Locking nozzles are > > banned. You have to stand there with trigger held in for "Safety" > > reasons. > > > The solution to the lack of locking nozzles is to jam the filler cap > inside the handle. The 156 cap works a treat. > Also helps prevent static discharge. You walk away rubbing the fabric of your clothes, sit in car, rubbing against velour seats, build up static charge, return to nozzle only to static discharge against nozzle and ignite petrol vapour coming from filler. This happens alot in countries where you can lock the nozzle. In UK you stay grounded by having to permanently hold the pump from beginning to end. has.mac |
#15
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On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 16:11:41 +0100, MeatballTurbo
>, wrote: >In article >, says... >> > >> > for petrol in the UK, we don't get no choice. Locking nozzles are >> > banned. You have to stand there with trigger held in for "Safety" >> > reasons. >> > >> > I think it is because it stops fuel getting spilled if the vac/pressure >> > autocuttoff fails (I had that actually happen at a pump once, and ended >> > up with a petrol soaked shoe). >> >> The solution to the lack of locking nozzles is to jam the filler cap >> inside the handle. The 156 cap works a treat. >> >> Fuel station operatives tend not to like you doing it for the reasons >> you mention (possible spillage) so I tend not to wander too far. Most >> petrol stations have such slow pumps that it does save you having to >> hold the handle for ages. Best regards >> >> Joe >> 156 2.0l TS >> >Is the 156 cap a screw in plastic thread? I'm sure when I bought a >Halfords locking cap for the Saab it shared a part number with a locking >cap for one Alfa or another? http://www.digest.net/alfa/FAQ/164/pb87/pb87.htm "The 164 is part of the "Type 4" project jointly developed by Fiat, Lancia, Saab and Alfa Romeo for the design and construction of a medium-to-big saloon frame. " Pete -- > 156 2.0 TS (2001) - Proteo Rosso (his) 147 2.0 TS (2002) - Gem Green (her's) |
#16
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On Mon, 12 Jul 2004 17:56:49 GMT, Catman >,
wrote: >> Damn, common snese. >Unless you wear shoes, in which case you're not grounded at all...... Unless your my kids, & then you are Grounded for driving without 'em :-) Pete -- > 156 2.0 TS (2001) - Proteo Rosso (his) 147 2.0 TS (2002) - Gem Green (her's) |
#17
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fmt wrote:
> Being a new owner of a 156 I'm starting to learn all the delights of > owning and driving an Italian car, but one thing that's really bugging > me at the moment is as regards putting petrol in the car. > I've tried at 5 different fuel stations, but everytime the same thing > happens. > Nozzle goes in, fuel delivery starts, then automatically stops (safety > device in the nozzle cuts in) after about 30p worth. This continues > to happen throughout the whole delivery time. > I've resorted to filling the car to the brim every time (£50 nearly) > but it takes forever to fill up, I'm talking 5 minutes or > so........surely this isn't right? > I've tried releasing the pressure on the nozzle, ands whilst this > works it just means the petrol is delivered really slowly, I've angled > the nozzle, I've even tried it upside down! Same problem always seems > to exist. > Has anyone else ever experienced this phenomenom and if so how do I > cure it? > Many thanks > FMT I am new to the world of alfa too and have had the same problem ! Cured by withdrawing the nozzle a couple of inches. ie dont put it all the way in, maybe only half-way. |
#18
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On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 20:40:32 GMT, NC >, wrote:
>Surely he means grounded via the nozzle . handle, not the shoes. and the nozzle would be connected to the pump by a hose made of ? Pete -- > 156 2.0 TS (2001) - Proteo Rosso (his) 147 2.0 TS (2002) - Gem Green (her's) |
#19
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Pete wrote:
> On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 20:40:32 GMT, NC >, wrote: > >>Surely he means grounded via the nozzle . handle, not the shoes. > and the nozzle would be connected to the pump by a hose made of ? > Well, something conductive, obviously. Oh. Right. As you were Actually, to be fair, it *could* be conductive, but the handle is (IME) covered in plastic anyway...... -- Catman MIB#14 SKoGA#6 TEAR#4 BOTAFOF#38 Apostle#21 COSOC#3 Tyger, Tyger Burning Bright (Remove rust to reply) Alfa 116 Giulietta 3.0l (Really) Sprint 1.7 Triumph Speed Triple: Black with extra black bits www.cuore-sportivo.co.uk |
#20
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On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 21:00:02 GMT, Catman >,
wrote: >Pete wrote: > >> On Tue, 13 Jul 2004 20:40:32 GMT, NC >, wrote: >> >>>Surely he means grounded via the nozzle . handle, not the shoes. >> and the nozzle would be connected to the pump by a hose made of ? >> >Well, something conductive, obviously. Oh. Right. As you were > >Actually, to be fair, it *could* be conductive, but the handle is (IME) >covered in plastic anyway...... I thought you might like that one <BWG> G'night folks Pete -- > 156 2.0 TS (2001) - Proteo Rosso (his) 147 2.0 TS (2002) - Gem Green (her's) |
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