Honestly I'm not sure that it causes any REAL problem with fuel delivery.
Come on physicists...does a pump have to work harder to move fluid in a vacuum? I'd guess not, since the entire system is within that vacuum, the only "leak" would be the injectors as they opened.
The real threat is the tank "imploding" if vacuum gets too high IMO. From what some of these guys are saying though, the tanks must be pretty sound structurally if they are seeing that much vacuum without causing physical damage.
My truck for some reason stopped venting correctly (again, no EVAP, I was an idiot), so for now I just don't put the cap on tight. When I re-do the truck, it will run EVAP. As far as I can tell, it's the best possible way to vent a tank.
Come on physicists...does a pump have to work harder to move fluid in a vacuum? I'd guess not, since the entire system is within that vacuum, the only "leak" would be the injectors as they opened.
The real threat is the tank "imploding" if vacuum gets too high IMO. From what some of these guys are saying though, the tanks must be pretty sound structurally if they are seeing that much vacuum without causing physical damage.
My truck for some reason stopped venting correctly (again, no EVAP, I was an idiot), so for now I just don't put the cap on tight. When I re-do the truck, it will run EVAP. As far as I can tell, it's the best possible way to vent a tank.
