About a month ago I lost my drive shaft on my 2006 2500 Mega cab. It failed at the slip yoke junction and the carrier or center bearing. I lost the entire slip yoke. I was towed to a decent garage who completed the repairs after getting the yoke shipped from michigan. I just filled by tank for the first time since the repair and I had a huge puddle of diesel fuel under the truck. I figured that i had just overfilled it. It is dripping from a 1/4 or 3/8 inch rubber hose that runs to the top of the tank about a foot in front of where the bed meets the cab. The is a second rubber hose near the back of the fuel tank and I'm not seeing any leak from that one. Now that the tank is less full a can push up on the bottom of the tank and hear air escaping from that hose. I put a bolt into the hose and that stops the air from coming out. That is the problem. I see no where that this hose can be connected to. It hanks down between the fuel tank and the drive shaft just about where the slip yoke is at. There is dents to the exhaust and you can see where the drive shaft hit the tank and the thin medal that runs along the fuel tank that i think is just a heat shield. From the marks on the heat shield and where the rubber hose ends, it is very likely that the end of the hose took a direct hit from the shrapnel that was flying around.
I have followed this hose as far as i can reach and it goes to a fitting that bent towards the center of the truck. Is there supposed to be some kind of a float device on the end of this hose or what? that idea does not make since to me but a can not see how an internal float device failed from the outside of the fuel tank taking a hit.
Would be safe for me to insert a bolt and hose clamp until I run enough diesel out to lower the tank? would plugging that that hose up do any damage? I would appreciate any help on this issue.
I have followed this hose as far as i can reach and it goes to a fitting that bent towards the center of the truck. Is there supposed to be some kind of a float device on the end of this hose or what? that idea does not make since to me but a can not see how an internal float device failed from the outside of the fuel tank taking a hit.
Would be safe for me to insert a bolt and hose clamp until I run enough diesel out to lower the tank? would plugging that that hose up do any damage? I would appreciate any help on this issue.