Dan McNally
New member
Be careful not to completely fill the tank . . . leave a little space for expansion, because gas coming from an underground tank will expand in a hot motorcycle. That minimizes, somewhat, the chance that liquid gas will end up in the charcoal canister. The tank isn't air tight, and the canister is designed to trap gasoline vapors that vent out of it, and hold them until they get sucked back into the engine when it is running. Overfilling the gas tank can result in raw fuel filling the canister.
Another thing I have found helpful is to fill my gas tank at the nearest gas station to home at the end of a ride. I'm lucky, as I have one only half a mile away. Gas can boil between 100 and 400 degrees, and adding cold gas cools the gas in the tank and helps minimize evaporation through the charcoal canister. When I do the top off, I don't get the gas smell in the garage . . . when I skip it, I do.
If you don't have a gas station close, keep a couple gallons of gas in a gas can at home, and use that to add to the tank to cool it before parking it in the garage.
Another thing I have found helpful is to fill my gas tank at the nearest gas station to home at the end of a ride. I'm lucky, as I have one only half a mile away. Gas can boil between 100 and 400 degrees, and adding cold gas cools the gas in the tank and helps minimize evaporation through the charcoal canister. When I do the top off, I don't get the gas smell in the garage . . . when I skip it, I do.
If you don't have a gas station close, keep a couple gallons of gas in a gas can at home, and use that to add to the tank to cool it before parking it in the garage.