realcaptron
Regular Contributor
ok folks...riddle me this please. Again thinking old school and trying my best to understand. I finally talked to a highly reputable marine parts shop in Long Beach Ca, and questioned an old timer there about this fuel pump and carb overflow (fuel return) situation I've been dealing with. For your consideration, here is what I was told..."the reason an overflow port that runs to the carb is NOT to prevent spillage into the bilge, but to prevent fuel escaping from a ruptured diaphragm into the crankcase and thinning the oil.. " He explained that with the old , non vented pump that currently resides on port engine, if the pump fails, the engine is simply going to stop running and while that diaphragm is in early stages of failure, the crankcase could become full of gas, but it would not go to bilge. He further stated that on the starboard side which DOES have a pump with overflow (return) vent port, I should, as MakoMark has repeatedly advised me, drill and tap a 1/8" npt fitting into a convenient location on the carb below the arrestor so that any fuel pumped up that line will all drip into the primary barrels. In fact, he went on to say that from a safety standpoint , the port side pump that is currently on the boat and with NO overflow port is actually safer than the starboard side WITH the port. He reiterated that failure of the diaphragm is NOT going to result in fuel in the bilge, as was my panic driven concern.
I then went to uscg regs under fuel pumps section 183.524, and found language that says (paraphrasing...."a sealed housing, open to crankcase only, or with a stripper tube to the carberator"). The pump on the port side is a sealed housing simply bolted on to the block.
So I'm wondering, if we only need a "sealed housing open to the crankcase only" what is the advantage of the airtex 60502 that I have in my hand with an overflow port?
I then went to uscg regs under fuel pumps section 183.524, and found language that says (paraphrasing...."a sealed housing, open to crankcase only, or with a stripper tube to the carberator"). The pump on the port side is a sealed housing simply bolted on to the block.
So I'm wondering, if we only need a "sealed housing open to the crankcase only" what is the advantage of the airtex 60502 that I have in my hand with an overflow port?

