Before I added the turbo I had picked up a charcoal canister from a toyota at the picknpull and had one port connected to the fuel vent line up in the engine compartment and the other end directly to the intake manifold. This setup worked very well - I never smelled fuel in the garage and there was never any significant pressure released when I opened the gas cap.
When I installed the turbo I ran out of space to keep the canister where I had it. I was also worried about going above atmospheric pressure in the canister. So I just plugged vent line in the engine compartment and left the canister off. Of course, now sometimes when I open the gas tank there is huge release of pressure, I mean huge!
So it's time for me to mount the canister again, but I'm wondering how to plumb it into the intake manifold. I'm thinking about adding a one-way valve in line back to the intake manifold. That way as pressure builds in the tank it could vent into the intake manifold, but when boost goes above atmospheric, the valve would prevent the pressure from going back into the canister.
Does this sound realistic? And where can I find a valve like this? I figure this problem has already been solved by others so I'm hoping to not have to do too much inventing

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