Here is an interesting article from
http://home.jps.net/~snowbum/locks_caps_etc.htmabout fuel cap venting.
As my cycle stalled twice today even with the cap off my other cycle, I am thinking of modifying the original cap with the silicon per the recommendations here, but wanted to see if anyone had tried this and what the results were?
By the way, I purchased pipe cleaner and ran it down from the venting (overflow) hole in the gas cap well until it came out the venting outlet where the hose should attach in the bottom of the tank and it was clean and unobstructed.
Bill
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VENTING:
The late 1977 (or perhaps from 1978) gas caps are changed in design, so that they allow air to pass to the inside of the tank, but fumes are not supposed to pass to the outside of the tank. To accomplish this, their are valves built into the cap. The very first of these caps could have problems. The symptom of a venting problem is when the bike starts running very lean, may buck and seem to run out of fuel, and this typically happens after some time on the highway, the time can be shorter if the tank was rather full to start with. OPENING the cap (unscrewing it a bit) will 'fix' the problem within 15 seconds, and this 'test' is nearly 100% for a bad cap vent. The cap can be modified to fix the problem permanently. Put it upside down on your workbench. Drill AWAY from the center, any direction, about 1/2" from the center. Thus the hole you will drill is off-center. Drill, 3/32", from the bottom of the cap, through the metal shell, and continue drilling carefully....go through the air space, and drill into the softer material that you then feel you are drilling through....it is maybe 1/8" thick. Drill through it, and then stop drilling. Clean out the cap as best you can of drilling swarf. Replace the cap on the tank. That's all there is to this.