• Hi Guest!
    If you appreciate British Car Forum and our 25 years of supporting British car enthusiasts with technical and anicdotal information, collected from our thousands of great members, please support us with a low-cost subscription. You can become a supporting member for less than the dues of most car clubs.

    There are some perks with a member upgrade!
    **Upgrade Now**
    (PS: Subscribers don't see this gawd-aweful banner
Tips
Tips

Fuel leak

Wana

Jedi Hopeful
Offline
I've got a bit of fuel weeping out around the banjo(?) bolts where the red arrows are pointing in the attached picture. Any thoughts on this? Since I don't have any experience I thought I'd check with the experts for some help! Thanks!

Wana

leak
 
Hi Wana, it appears that you have paper washers installed under the banjo bolt heads. They may be old compressed and need replacing. If they are copper replace them with the paper type. In either case if snugging them down a bit tighter does not stop the leak and you have no spares a bit of Halo mar gasket sealant should seal them up.--Fwiw--Keoke
 
Thanks Keoke. Is there anything to watch out for when removing or replacing the banjo bolts, or is it an "even you can do this" type of operation?
 
I'm no expert, but the gripping surface of the bolts is small, and soft as well. So make sure you use an appropriate size socket or closed end wrench. No open end or crescent wrench. Other than that, the usual precautions: if it doesn't oome out right away, use some penetrating liquid, go slow, etc. Don't be in a hurry, but it should be little problem.
 
Thanks guys - I snugged the banjo bolts up just a bit (13/16 socket worked great) and now no leaking at all! Now if the weather was better I could go for a drive... 32 degrees and raining/sleeting with 5-7 inches of snow tonight... at least I can work on the Healey in the comfort of the garage.
 
Wana said:
Thanks Keoke. Is there anything to watch out for when removing or replacing the banjo bolts, or is it an "even you can do this" type of operation?


Yep, "Even you can do this", but be very careful when you remove the banjo bolt. Inside the fuel inlet is a small conical wire mesh filter. They like to jump out and get lost in the shop so you can't find em.--Keoke
 
Back
Top