Steve nailed it, you put fuel into the head space.
Then there was the time the pump said I put 18+ gallons into my MGB. When I
saw the pump reading, I freaked and opened the trunk expecting to find it
full of fuel (It wasn't).
I complained to the gas station owner, he said I had an 18 gallon tank.
I pulled out a copy of my shop manual and showed him the size of the tank.
(Doesn't every car owner carry a shop manual with them?)
He said I had a non-stock tank.
I asked him if he was a betting man, and did he have a couple of antifreeze
containers as I had an electric fuel pump and some time to kill. I told him
that if he could get 18 gallons out of my car, I would give him an hour to
gather a crowd and I would kiss his ass on main street.
He gave up and charged me for 12 gallons.
Yes I did report that one to weights and measures.
On Thu, May 29, 2008 at 4:50 AM, BJ8 Healeys <sbyers@ec.rr.com> wrote:
> Don, if you take a typical 1 gallon milk jug and pour liquid into it from a
> graduated container, you'll find that 1 gallon is significantly shy of
> filling the container to the top. I would guess that the same is true of
> your 7 gallon container. If you filled yours to the top, I'm sure it would
> be more than 7 gallons exactly.
> Most (probably all) states do ensure that the pumps are calibrated
> correctly and then sealed to prevent the public from being ripped off.
>
> Steve Byers
> HBJ8L/36666
> BJ8 Registry
> Havelock, NC
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