Leaky gas cap?

GoldenMotor.com

Beej

New Member
Jun 7, 2010
119
0
0
San Diego, CA
Is there a quick fix for this? I tried the search and got nothing. I get a small leak from my gas cap whe I ride. Not too much but enough to drip down the tank.
 

GearNut

Active Member
Aug 19, 2009
5,104
11
38
San Diego, Kaliforgnia
Not to sound rude, but just don't fill your tank up so full.
If I fill mine up all the way it leaks allover. I fill it to an inch or so below the top of the tank, about 2 inches below the filler bung.
The only other guess that I have is that the gasket around your cap is not sealing well to the filler bung on the tank. Are their any gouges in the gasket or dents on the bung?
 

GearNut

Active Member
Aug 19, 2009
5,104
11
38
San Diego, Kaliforgnia
Leather makes for a decent gas cap gasket material. Inner tube rubber will eventually swell up to almost twice it's original size.

Edit: Sheet cork, available in hobby stores, also works very well.
 

bairdco

a guy who makes cool bikes
Aug 18, 2009
6,537
264
63
living the dream in southern california
to solve the problem, take your cap off and set in on a hard concrete or metal surface.

next, take a BFHammer and hit it as many times as you want. (note: cap must be hit as hard as possible.) (note 2: cap will try to retaliate by bouncing up and hitting you in the face. wear proper protection.)

step three. dispose of cap properly.

that will solve the problem of the leaky gas cap, but opens up another problem. "where do i find a new gas cap?"
 

kaizer_soze

New Member
Dec 9, 2011
2
0
0
TX
I quick fix that worked well for me was to wrap the top of the lip of the opening in the tank with plumbers tape (not really tape, white, adheres to itself and fits to any shape). I had to cover the lip with at least 10 layers of the tape, but now the cap sits tightly and there is zero leakage even with a full tank.
 

Allen_Wrench

Resident Mad Scientist
Feb 6, 2010
2,784
26
36
Indianapolis
Leather makes for a decent gas cap gasket material. Inner tube rubber will eventually swell up to almost twice it's original size.

Edit: Sheet cork, available in hobby stores, also works very well.
Inner tube rubber also dissolves in petroleum products. I have personally done this to prove a point. Leather and cork aren't too bad. But when I built my tank out of a softball bat, I realized I would need to make my own vented gas cap.

I used a large, threaded brass fitting for my bung which had a companion threaded collar. I made a brass disk to close the end of the collar and turn it into a cap. I used a large ball bearing and a hammer to dish the disk a bit. I then drilled a hole for a rivet in the center and a vent hole just off-center, in the disk. I made a Nitril rubber washer to fit inside the disk.

Nitril is ideal because it is NOT dissolved by gasoline. First I soldered the disk into place at the open end of the collar. Then I riveted the washer to the inside of my cap with a small brass washer in between. Air comes in through the vent hole and can get past the Nitril washer, but fumes can't blow out through there - the washer seals against the disk. It is designed, however, to vent from inside if you blow VERY,VERY hard. This is a stopgap against pressure buildup.
 
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thegnu

New Member
Sep 15, 2011
982
1
0
freedom pa
to solve the problem, take your cap off and set in on a hard concrete or metal surface.

next, take a BFHammer and hit it as many times as you want. (note: cap must be hit as hard as possible.) (note 2: cap will try to retaliate by bouncing up and hitting you in the face. wear proper protection.)

step three. dispose of cap properly.

that will solve the problem of the leaky gas cap, but opens up another problem. "where do i find a new gas cap?"
Heres a guy who does NOT fool around , Ima fan of the get a bigger hammer alignment system as well .
 

Nashville Kat

Well-Known Member
Apr 20, 2009
1,501
55
48
Jacksonville, Florida
A thin piece of nylon material like the top of a sherbert or cottage cheese contaner is great and gasoline proof- you can put one or more UNDERNEATH the normal rubber gasket

works every time!
 

CroMagnum

Member
Sep 2, 2011
148
1
16
Los Angeles
Back in the 1970s I used to use a "Slopper Stopper" on my dirt bikes. Basically it was just a big foam rubber donut that stretched over the gas cap. It still let the tank vent, but when gas dribbled past the cap the foam would soak it up.

Get some open cell foam and cut it in a circle a couple of inches bigger than your gas cap. Then cut a hole in the middle just about the size of the filler neck. Screw on your gas cap, stretch it over the cap and you're good to go!