WARNING, WARNING, Will Robinson!

OK, sorry for that. But I have experience with foam in fuel tanks. I have raced for over 30 years with this stuff. In the fuel tank it breaks down in about 2 to 3 years. What this means is, it falls apart. Then the little particles go down your fuel line and completely plug your filter, etc.

A few years ago I was racing and pit crewing with a guy who didn't realize his was too old. We wound up sitting in the pits with the fuel tank between our legs, pulling the remains of the foam out of the large access hole in the fuel tank. Some nut case walked up to us smoking a cigarette and asked, "What you guys doing?" We freaked.

No, nothing ignited, but it was a scarey moment.
Since then I refuse to use foam.

Hope this helps you understand anti-slosh fuel foam a little better.

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88 Montero with Gen 3 alloys, 31 inch Toyo's, A/T, Dual Bouncy Seats, Midland CB radio, Rebuilding 2.6L . See the details http://www.cardomain.com/memberpage/710921