Drainable fuel nozzle receptacle
11325824 · 2022-05-10
Inventors
Cpc classification
B67D7/56
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67D7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B67D7/32
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67D7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B67D7/56
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A fuel nozzle receptacle for use with auxiliary fuel tanks is disclosed. A fuel nozzle is received in a receptacle or boot in a nozzle-down orientation that defines a secure storage for the nozzle. The receptacle includes a drain port on the lower end of the receptacle and a drain tube is attached to the drain port. A valve is plumbed into the receptacle. When residual fuel has accumulated in the receptacle, the end of the drain tube is fed into an appropriate holding vessel and the valve is opened to allow the residual fuel to drain from the receptacle into the holding vessel.
Claims
1. An auxiliary fuel system, comprising: an auxiliary fuel tank comprising a fuel hose that fluidly connects to a fuel nozzle having a handle and a trigger at a proximal end near the fuel hose and an opening tip at a distal end configured to release fuel; a fuel nozzle receptacle configured and positioned in sufficient proximity to the auxiliary fuel tank for receiving the fuel nozzle in a tip down orientation, the fuel nozzle receptacle having an open upper end, a closed lower end that defines a reservoir for holding residual fuel with a drain port extending through the closed lower end, wherein the fuel nozzle receptacle has a sight glass configured to allow a user to view the reservoir, and the fuel nozzle receptacle is configured such that when the fuel nozzle is received within, the opening tip of the fuel nozzle does not abut against the closed lower end of the fuel nozzle receptacle and is not otherwise positioned within the reservoir such that accumulated residual fuel can contact the opening tip-; a selectively openable valve in the drain port; further comprising a drain hose having a near end attached to the drain port, and a terminal end; and wherein the auxiliary fuel tank and the fuel nozzle receptacle are positioned in a truck bed on a truck.
2. The auxiliary fuel system according to claim 1 further comprising a cowling extending over the open upper end to define a partial covering that only covers a portion of the fuel nozzle while the fuel nozzle is positioned in the fuel nozzle receptacle in a tip down orientation.
3. The auxiliary fuel system according to claim 1, wherein the opening tip at the distal end of the fuel nozzle is vertically aligned directly above the drain port when the fuel nozzle is received by the fuel nozzle receptacle.
4. The auxiliary fuel system according to claim 2, wherein the opening tip at the distal end of the fuel nozzle is vertically aligned directly above the drain port when the fuel nozzle is received by the fuel nozzle receptacle.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention will be better understood, and its numerous objects and advantages will be apparent by reference to the following detailed description of the invention when taken in conjunction with the following drawings.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATED EMBODIMENTS
(12) The invention will now be described in detail with reference to the drawings. Directional terms used herein correspond to the convention wherein, for instance: “upper” refers to the direction above and away from a ground plane; “lower” is generally in the opposite direction, “inward” is the direction from the exterior toward the interior of the component, “vertical” is the direction normal to a horizontal ground plane, and so on.
(13) A prior art fuel nozzle receptacle 100 is shown in
(14) A first illustrated embodiment of a fuel nozzle receptacle 10 according to the present invention is shown in
(15) It will be appreciated that the components of the receptacle 10 may be fabricated from any material appropriate for use with petrochemicals, including metals, plastics and the like, which are not degradable by petrochemicals. Moreover, the components such as the boot 12 and the reducing coupling 26 may be fabricated in a unitary module that includes fittings for installation of a valve 32 and an outlet 34. The valve 32 may be of any appropriate type, including the gate valves 32 shown in
(16) Turning now to
(17) It will further be appreciated that the configuration of the boot 12 may be varied according to need and circumstance from that shown in
(18) With reference to
(19) Those of skill in the art will understand that the fuel nozzle 10 described herein creates a flow path for residual fuel that flows or drains from the nozzle 20, the flow path running from the nozzle 20 to the boot 12, through a drain opening at the lower end of the boot and into a valve assembly, and from the valve assembly through a drain tube. The lower, or distal end 24 of the boot 12 defines a catchment basin or reservoir for accumulating fuel that drains from the nozzle 20. When an operator observes that fuel that has accumulated in the reservoir needs to be drained, the drain tube 38 is inserted into an appropriate container and the valve 32 is opened so that the fuel accumulated in the reservoir drains into the container. The valve assembly includes a selectively openable and closable valve—when the valve is open the fluid path is open so that residual fuel that has accumulated in the reservoir in the boot 12 flows out of the drain tube into a collector vessel; when the valve is closed the fluid path is closes so that residual fuel accumulates in the boot.
(20) The fuel nozzle 10 described herein may be used in numerous types of vehicles and numerous other situations, ranging from pickup trucks and other trucks, emergency vehicles and agricultural equipment and stationary fuel tanks.
(21) While the present invention has been described in terms of preferred and illustrated embodiments, it will be appreciated by those of ordinary skill that the spirit and scope of the invention is not limited to those embodiments, but extend to the various modifications and equivalents as defined in the appended claims.