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Aftermarket fuel/water separator drain mod

Josephml21

Member
75
46
18
Location
PA
Aftermarket fuel/water separators lacks the drain hose on the bottom which can make a mess inside your unit when you do drain water. With two needle valves, a cap, some fuel line and clamps you can rig one together.

You'll need two 1/4in OD X 1/8in MIP angle needle valves and a 1/4in OD compression cap. I got these from Home depot in the plumbing department. PXL_20220509_151621527.jpg

Remove the needle valve assembly from one of the pieces. The red arrow shows where the needle valve was screwed on, these threads will fit the fuel/water separator. I used a bit of yellow Teflon tape to be sure to seal everything up.

The plastic screw that comes with the fuel/water separator has a small o-ring on it which I also used. It goes on the threads that will screw into the fuel/water separator. PXL_20220509_151615790~2.jpg


The cap is used to close off the extra opening. It is shown here with the red arrow. PXL_20220509_153036128~2.jpg

From there just use a length of fuel line and some hose clamps to make a drain. I made mine about 18 inches, long enough to get it out the door for when I want to drain the fuel/water separator.

I believe the issue that everyone was having was no one could find a fitting with the proper thread pattern that would fit the bottom of the fuel/water separator. I just so happened to get lucky and randomly tried the threads from where the needle valve is screwed onto which happened to work.

If anyone has any questions or has problems sourcing these parts let me know and I'll try to help.

Thanks
 
Last edited:

cbrTodd

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
270
483
63
Location
Indianapolis, Indiana
I did some measuring of the plug on one of the Napa 3472 filters and it came out to 3/8-28, straight threads (not tapered). That is 1/8-BSPP. The drain petcock I removed from the original filter is 1/8 NPT. So I ordered a 1/8-BSPP male to 1/8 NPT female adapter and hooked up the original drain valve to the Napa filter. It was a little tight on the OD like my particular adapter might have been on the large end of tolerance but it screwed into the filter with just a little force. I tested 2 filters and both fit the same way, and the original plug still fit fine in both afterwards so the tight fit doesn't appear to be problematic.

If you want the remote drain hose without the hose itself being pressurized when the set is running, here's a way to do it with the Napa filters.

20220711_174648.jpg
 

Mainsail

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
1,512
1,696
113
Location
Puget Sound, WA
I did some measuring of the plug on one of the Napa 3472 filters and it came out to 3/8-28, straight threads (not tapered). That is 1/8-BSPP. The drain petcock I removed from the original filter is 1/8 NPT. So I ordered a 1/8-BSPP male to 1/8 NPT female adapter and hooked up the original drain valve to the Napa filter. It was a little tight on the OD like my particular adapter might have been on the large end of tolerance but it screwed into the filter with just a little force. I tested 2 filters and both fit the same way, and the original plug still fit fine in both afterwards so the tight fit doesn't appear to be problematic.

If you want the remote drain hose without the hose itself being pressurized when the set is running, here's a way to do it with the Napa filters.

View attachment 872785
So this?

1732639260461.png
 

Light in the Dark

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
3,856
6,054
113
Location
MA
I've never used the drip line. The way that its plumbed is for a GI to dump contents out and onto the ground with little care, IMO. I won't do that personally, so I see no loss not replacing it and just going with a simple bottom drain that you can use an empty coffee can to catch the contents with.
 

CallMeColt

Well-known member
Supporting Vendor
1,050
1,517
113
Location
Wilson County, Texas
I've never used the drip line. The way that its plumbed is for a GI to dump contents out and onto the ground with little care, IMO. I won't do that personally, so I see no loss not replacing it and just going with a simple bottom drain that you can use an empty coffee can to catch the contents with.
A disposable cup is what I use. Dump it is the "bad diesel" jug when done, then toss the cup. One less thing in the way in there too!
 
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