ScottyBoy
No, that's not a banana in my pants.
I think there is a tiny bit of logic in the "super low levels might not cool the pump as well" theory... but you guys are out on a limb with the gravity feeding the pump bit. Mechanics are like a bunch of gossiping old ladies... They tend to believe in voodoo and drink a lot.I've never heard of any issues from driving on a half tank. But I HAVE heard many mechaics say that you should never make a habit of running on 1/4 tank or less ALL the time. It will cause a fuel pump to fail much faster. They say that it makes the fuel pump work harder since there is less gas being gravity fed into the pump. They say it also makes the pump run hotter because it doesn't stay fully submerged to cool itself off. Kinda makes sense if you think about it.![]()
I think that would mainly apply to people who always put like 5 bucks at the time in there and drive it till it just about kills, then put like 5 more bucks in.![]()
I always use this as law. Though the pump does sit in a cavity that contains fuel, which keeps it cool. If you hit potholes it can cause the cause fuel in that cavity to spill out. I tend to never let the tank get below 1/4. You know when your on that last 1/8 the gas station is never close by.
It seems logical to me that a full tank would be better than an almost empty tank if you don't drive it very often. Less air and more fuel seems like it would keep the fuel from oxidizing or deteriorating in the tank. That could be just wishful thinking though.
It does make some sense to me. It seems logical that the pump wouldn't have to work "quite" as hard if it had more fuel in the tank. Think about it like this: when you first take out that oil drain plug, that oil damn near gushes out. As the oil level in the pan drops, the oils drains slower and slower. So it kinda makes sense that if you had 20+ gallons on top of that fuel pump, it wouldn't have to work quite as hard as if it only had like 4 or 5 gallons on it.
I'm not saying your pump has to strain its ass off to pump when the fuel level is lower, but I'd think it would be a little bit less (and I use the term "little" pretty loosely) of a strain on the pump if it had more fuel in the tank.
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