I have a 74 Challenger that I have swapped in a 440. Last winter, I installed a Holley Sniper. I used the Spectra efi tank. It has the four vent tubes on the top of the tank that connect to a fuel separator and then to the engine bay just like the original. The evap canister was removed many years ago. It has been vented to atmosphere since then. It worked fine. About a month ago, I started smelling gas fumes after driving some distance. I found that the vent line for the evap system was spitting fuel.

I figured that I could just run a vacuum line from the evap line to the throttle body and that would take care of it. The car ran OK until the next fill-up. It started sucking so much fuel through the line it was extremely rich and wouldn't hardly run.

Plan B. I mounted a small container and just vented the evap line into it to catch the fuel. That worked somewhat for a while, accumulating a small amount of fuel which I would dump into the mower.

Last night, I took the car out for a drive. I filled the tank and drove about 20 miles. When I pulled the car in the garage and shut it down, I could hear a gurgling sound. I checked the overflow container and it was almost full. I opened the fuel cap and I could hear pressure escaping and the gurgling quit.

I am using the original fuel cap that was on the car new. I am the original owner, so I know it's original. I think that cap is supposed to hold a small amount pressure, but vent the excess.

Has anyone else experienced this? If so, what did you do to fix it?


74 Challenger, bought it new. In 1978 I replaced the original 318 with a 446 and 727. Mild cam, Jardine headers, and Holley Sniper EFI.
New engine! 511" RB, Edelbrock Performer RPM heads, Eagle rotating assy, Comp hyd roller cam, Doug's 2" headers.