LBrown59
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Oct 27, 2004
- Messages
- 16,904
- Tractor
- 2003 Kubota BX1500/2004 Kubota Bx23/2005 Kubota BX1500
I have a bunch of Jegs Jugs, but found that their spout left much to be desired and just pouring out of the jug wasn't practical for me. My solution was to get a siphon barrel pump Amazon.com: Siphon Pump: Everything Else cut it down to the height of the Jugs ...then, I lift it onto the hood of my tractor and can siphon nearly the entire can right into the fuel tank with one or two pumps/pulls ...I made the cut on a slant so as to leave any water in the bottom of the jug. If your fuel tank is lower, you can simply pump instead of siphon ...and you can't beat the price.
Bought one of those new-type cans in the US for diesel for my tractor & what a PITA. I disabled the shut-off mechanism in the spout, drilled a hole behind the handle on the top of the can & installed a tubeless tire valve with the core removed. I just remove the cap to let the can vent when fuelling my Kubota.
Fairly simple:Now there is a good idea.
But...how do you get it installed. The rubber ones need to be pulled from the interior and the threaded ones with a nut on the end have to have the nut held from behind.
Bought one of those new-type cans in the US for diesel for my tractor & what a PITA. I disabled the shut-off mechanism in the spout, drilled a hole behind the handle on the top of the can & installed a tubeless tire valve with the core removed. I just remove the cap to let the can vent when fuelling my Kubota.
gwdixon - I drill the hole for the valve & thread a home-built valve insertion tool onto the valve (metal valve cap with a length brass chain soldered to it), feed the small chain through the fill spout opening, turn can upside down & fish the chain out the small hole with a piece of bent wire, pull valve up through the hole. Remove core & you're done - looks factory!
GRSTTHEGREAT complained of having to fish out the plastic spouts and I can go one better than that. I quickly found that plastic cans were a big PITA so I looked for and found a 105 gallon fuel tank with electric pump and shutoff nozzle. Last summer I was fueling one of my tractors and the aluminum nozzle on the hose handle valve fell off and into the tank. I couldn't see it as the tank was nearly full so I left it in till I got the fuel down to about 1/4 tank. I fished around for a while with wire coat hangers to no avail, then I found a couple of bamboo plant stakes and using them managed to roll it around to where I could push in one stick to stand it up, then pushed in the other and it was exactly fit to wedge into the nozzle. Then just lifted it out. I fixed that problem with it then by putting a self-tapping screw thru the valve socket and into the nozzle. I have never seen one of those end nozzles fall off like that before but they are just swaged into the socket of the handle valve. I felt lucky that it only took me about 5 minutes to fish it out and the tank wasnt that big so it was not too hard to see down inside it.