I think you are right that if you use an external pre-filter, the flow rate would be too slow to activate the whistle, plus a lot of air would probably come back up through the fill opening, also bypassing the whistle. I remember how slow my Baja filter was. A fuel whistle will work best if you are fueling directly from a marina fuel pump.edmundsteele wrote:I have never heard of such a device – a fuel whistle! I always refuel from a jerry jug via a Racor funnel. My guess is that the flow rate through the filter would be too slow to generate enough air passage for the whistle. Any thoughts on this?
Great idea though – I could have used this when I ran a power catamaran and saved myself a fortune in Dawn washing up liquid.
Ed
Keep in mind that a fuel whistle is only a "quick and dirty" solution to the problem mentioned. A much better solution is to move the vent to a location that is significantly higher than the tank fill and easily visible from the tank fill location. On one of my previous boats the diesel fill was in the cockpit sole, and the diesel tank vent was at the highest vertical point in the bridge deck, so there was about an 18" vertical distance between the two. Even so, the vent would still overflow first, I suppose because the air coming out the vent was at a fairly high velocity and the air bubbles escaping the tank would burp fuel up out of the vent. I would hold a fuel "diaper" under the tank vent, and when I got the first burp I knew it was time to stop filling the tank. Not all boat designs will accommodate that configuration. Short of that, filling the fuel tank may need to be a two-person operation, with one operating the nozzle, and the other at the vent holding the diaper and monitoring the progress.
Smooth sailing,
--Jim