• 10 gallons per 100 revolutions
  • Cast aluminum construction for corrosion resistance and light weight
  • Pump can be padlocked for security
  • Pump can be set up for reverse flow
  • Top selling hand pump since the 1960's - highly durable & easy to use

Had it for about a year now and it still works great. Once it is flowing I think it is maybe even 11 cranks for a gallon. UPDATE: after pumping out about 2500 gallons of gas the washer inside just needs replace (leaking by stem of handle) but it looks like there are two bolt that can be easily taken off to replace it. Some of the paint has also come off (maybe because of the gas leaking before I changed the washer) but really this is expected and the pump is very reliable.

AWESOME PRODUCT THUS FAR. MADE IN USA! I tried some cheapo china pumps on here, THEY WILL NOT WORK with gasoline. I will say you gotta "be a man" to spin this pump, but its very smooth and works quite well, they even had some Teflon tape in the box. VERY SATISFIED! Thank you seller,

There are cheaper pumps out there but most of the ones I’ve seen sitting around for a long time are these fill rite pumps. It worked great on hydraulic fluid. It is well built and feels very solid

So far so good- replaced it with an electric one I had-- and like this better for my setup. have a 55 stainless steel barrel mounted on a cart. I had to mess with the battery before- now just pump. have had it a month-- I mounted my Goldenrod filter- did not have a 45 degree adapter but will get one since the outlet angles downward. that is my only complaint. filter sits at 45 degrees right now- but will straighten it out eventually.

Perfect for fueling the tractor from a drum

Perfect for what I'm using it for. Super easy to build and place onto the drum. I'm using it for pumping diesel from 55 gallon steel drums to equipment as needed. Hand pump is great because no power needed and simple to control flow.

I was trying to figure out a way to get rid of my cheap hand crank pump (that kept breaking) on my 30 gallon gas caddy and find a quality pump that would work. Finding a quality pump that would just screw on it impossible. I found this Fill-Rite FR112 pump. I took a chance knowing that it had a 2" base and my suction tube was 1 1/4". It was pretty easy to get it reduced to the correct size (parts at you local hardware store). It took three parts. 2" female threaded to a reduced to 1 1/4" to a bushing then to a 1 1/4" female threaded. I got all three parts for under $9. I used PVC and used PVC glue to glue the parts together. I used gas resistant thread sealer ($7) and tighten everything down. The only problem I encountered is the 1 1/4" female end. It was standard NPT threading and my suction pipe was threaded with some weird Chinese metric fine thread. The PVC worked very well since I could cross thread it and removed the shaving. There was no damage to the gas caddy suction pipe. I let everything dry and gave it a go. It worked perfectly! You can get the same three parts in galvanized steel and that would work fine except you may damage the threads on the 1 1/4" suction pipe. The only thing I need to do is add the grounding wire. The pump seems to be very good quality and should last a long time. One thing I liked is that the instruction came with replacement part list. This could be handy in the future. I hope not. So far I am very happy with the pump. Time will tell.....

I use this on a 50 gallon tank of gasoline for farm use. Low effort, high volume pump. Fits standard 2" bung opening. Has adjustable length pick-up tube that slides. No cutting required.

The description has to explain that the pump need to be modified to get it work in both ways, has to be opened to make it suction from another can. Thank You

It works as good as you could w\could want for a hand pump. Went together easily and primed without any problems. Next time I might go for an electric pump and save my arm strength but it was my choice this time not the pumps fault.