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bobhatton wrote:I understand their pumps are made in China
Rogue wrote:bobhatton wrote:I understand their pumps are made in China
So are iPhones..
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Fozzy, give us a shout tomorrow and we'll see what we can do for you.
bobhatton wrote:And I would never have one of those.
Rogue wrote:bobhatton wrote:And I would never have one of those.
In fairness, neither would I but I couldn't find a South Korean supplier for fuel pumps..
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Odin_S wrote:Did the Chinese do something bad to you Mr Bob?![]()
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All your posts revolve around not touching anything from China.Your house must be very bare if nothing in there comes from there.
Sorry for thread highjack
Fozzy wrote:The pump is fine, it was crimped with the ones supplied with the pump.![]()
My guess is that it was cheap crap that couldn't handle the amps.
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The joints are now soldered properly and heatshrunk, so no more problems.
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If that pump fails now im not taking the tank out again, I'd rather break it
Rogue wrote:
You need to be very clear that the heatshrink you've used is safe for petrol.If not it will simply dissolve, exposing your wires and putting you at risk of short circuit
(as well as contaminating your fuel).
I always use crimped connections within the fuel tank for just this reason.
Fozzy wrote:Rogue wrote:
I thought I'd be better off with soldered connectors.Is that likely to be more dangerous now? I really don't want to have to take the tank out again
Definitely better off with soldered connections, it's just as Patrick says not all heat shrink is compatible with petrol.If you don't want to dismantle everything again just take some of your heatshrink and drop it into a jar of petrol and see how it gets on.