misfire,step hard on pedal, softly,going slow and idling
1) If fuel tank is full you will need to siphon fuel out 2) Remove any type of skid plate or cover from fuel tank. 3) Disconnect fuel fill tube, wiring harness, and fuel lines from fuel tank. 4) Support fuel tank and remove hold down bolts(or nuts) for fuel tank strap. 5) Lower fuel tank to ground. NOTE: You may need to remove driveline on some vehicles to have room to get tank out. 6) Use brass punch to unscrew fuel pump locking plate on top of fuel tank. 7)Remove and replace fuel pump from tank and reassemble everything the same way you took it apart.
I Think you have other problems. Change the fuel filter and if that doesn't do it take it to a garage. You purchase a gasoline can and a funnel. Fill the gasoline can with fuel from your local gasoline station. Pour it into your vehicles tank using the funnel. Cycle the ignition key on and off several times pausing breifly for a few seconds when in the on position, this will prime the system, then start it up.
A surge tank is basically a pressurized coolant reservoir. As your engine heats and cools the coolant expands and contracts. Because of this You need a place for extra coolant to go to when it expands and be drawn from when it contracts. Conventionally the recovery tank or reservoir was not pressurized. A tube from the radiator cap allowed coolant to be sucked and drained in to the reservoir. However, on many newer vehicles like yours the reservoir is pressurized and called a surge tank.
It is either in the gas tank itself or if you get down and look on the drivers side right by the back door under the car it should be there somewhere and you could always follow the gas line coming out of the tank and then you should find it it may only have the one in the tank.
Issues can arise from having too much. Its not worth the risk. Syphon some out or drain it until you have the proper level.
tank
No.
Yes, they sure are. When this happens you will not be the only vehicle this happens to. There will be multiple vehicles with the same problem. Report the problem to the owner of the station. They all have insurance that should take care of this.
the most probable thing that will happen is that the septic tank will clog up, because micro bacteria cant break down grease
my 1976 dodge d100 has a 30 gallon tank.
Not enough info in the question. Some vehicles, they are in the tank, some next to the tank, and some they are on the engine.
water from the tail pipe usually means there is watered down gas in your tank and for the most part is normal at a couple of drips per min.
The tank tracks allows the very heavy tank to move over uneven and soft ground. The tracks spreads the weight of the tank over a longer distance. Ground that wheeled vehicles would soon become bogged down and unable to move forward.
Hover tank
Nothing happens to the tank but the fuel will expand slightly.
the tank will leak
with a match put match inside tank. burn it out.