In lieu of an upper cover I have a splash guard attached to the outer face of the spare tire well (deflects water from the windshield plenum). This means only 1 layer of rubber between the tank opening and hose clamp -- the boot. Clamp holds it very tightly against that lip. Impossible to remove without loosening the clamp. Simplest improvement to the upper cover would be a design that straddles the clamp, allowing it to hold the boot only. Bill Robertson #5939 >--- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "therealdmcvegas" <dmcvegas@xxxx> wrote: > It is a flawed design, yes. But only because too many people over > tighten the boot and cap. > > You've got rubber, on rubber, and you're trying to hold them both > down with a hose clamp, onto a small, plastic lip underneath. So when > you try and torque the giant hose clamp down, you're not going to > really feel as strong a resistance in your hand, like you would if > you were clamping in a radiator hose, for instance. When you over > torque the clamp, it doesn't cut into the rubber, like it would a > hose. Instead, both the cap, and the boot begin to creep upwards, and > slide off the lip of the tank. Tighten down the clamp too far, and > the cap will pop right off of the boot. > > Instead, you need to tighten down the clamp only so far, until you've > got a snug fit. As soon as the clamp stops compressing the rubber > cap, you're there. > > There is obviously a safety consideration. After all, if the cap is > loose, and/or breached somehow, you will have gasoline fumes enter > the passenger compartment, as they waft up thru the drain on the > water trap for the fresh air intake, and are then sucked into the > passenger compartment, where they might be able to be ignited. As a > side note, if you top off your gas tank, and smell fumes inside > afterwards, you've got a problem with the boot. The belief that this > is "normal" for all DeLoreans is total B.S. After replacing a ripped > boot, and tightening down my cap properly, I can top off the tank to > the point of having a full filler neck, and I cannot smell a thing. > > Now, why did DMC, or Lotus choose this design? Who knows. But, My > guess would be that you need to completely isolate the electical > wires. Which isn't a problem to get around, and could be easily > replaced. Just swap it over to the same locking ring assembly that > holds the sending unit in place. You could do it one of two ways, > with either a two, or 3 peice assembly that would require minor > modifications to the boot and cap, depending upon tooling costs. > > I wouldn't really think that the gas cap becomming unlodged would be > that big of a problem, since I've never heard of this senario > actually being played out in real life, and due to the limited # of > vehicles involved. But contact me off list if you want to know more > details. > > -Robert > vin 6585 "X" > > --- In dmcnews@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx, "Harold McElraft" <hmcelraft@xxxx> > wrote: > > Very interesting information and probably something we should all > > think about. > > > > The current configuration of the fuel pump and the clamping still > > has a weakness in that the pump can come out because the fuel tank, > > where the fuel pump clamp goes around the rubber boot, is too > > flexible. In a hard frontal impact or probably front side impact > the > > boot can probably come off especially if the inspection cover above > > it was broken loose or deformed in some way. I can't tell you how > > many of these fuel pump boots I've seen that are loose or could be > > maneuvered by hand and just slipped off. Until now I have not > > considered the consequences in an accident. > > > > I can think of several ways to anchor the boot as I'm sure lots of > > members can. I believe this is probably a safety issue that we need > > to address. > > > > Send me any suggestions (hmcelraft@xxxx) and I will accumulate > > and post for the group. I'm sure a practical solution(s) can be > > developed or formulated by one of our innovative vendors. > > > > Harold McElraft - 3354 To address comments privately to the moderating team, please address: moderators@xxxxxxxxxxx For more info on the list, tech articles, cars for sale see www.dmcnews.com To search the archives or view files, log in at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/dmcnews/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: dmcnews-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/