BoulderCharles Posted October 15, 2020 Share Posted October 15, 2020 I decided to keep the EVAP system on my LS2 swap to avoid the gas fumes in my garage. I thought I would share my experience in case others wanted to try the same thing. Overall, it was fairly simple. I got my LS2 from a 2005 Pontiac GTO so I just went ahead and bought the following for a 2005 GTO: EVAP Purge Solenoid (relocated to the firewall) EVAP Vent Solenoid (inside the hatch area, where the Datsun charcoal canister was) Charcoal canister (mounted near the gas tank under the car) GM MAP sensor (for the fuel tank pressure) Here’s how I put this together (if I missed something, feel free to let me know): I have a Tanks, Inc. fuel tank so I had one NPT vent fitting and a small vent on the fuel pump. I used the NPT vent fitting (with a tee) for the filler neck vent and the charcoal canister. The charcoal canister has an output for the EVAP vent and one to the motor. I just ran a fuel hose from the canister to the purge valve at the motor. At the motor, I used the GM purge solenoid, mounted at the firewall, then sent it to the throttle body. The tricky part was the fuel tank pressure sensor. In the 2005 GTO it is built into the fuel pump. I realized the tank pressure sensor uses the same 5V signal as a MAP sensor and guessed that the ECU wouldn’t know the difference, which worked out. I attached the MAP sensor to the fuel pump vent with a short peice of tubing. Wired everything up to the ECU. I know it’s a bit of a “can I make this work” exercise but it is fun to know it can work. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.