If you’ve driven behind a pickup truck lately, you may have noticed a strange black “stick” rising up from the bed — a thin pole with a cap or cylinder on top. They seem to be everywhere now, especially on lifted trucks and work vehicles, and people can’t stop asking what they’re for.
At first glance, they look like sensors, cameras, antennas, or even some kind of GPS tracker. Some people think they’re police devices. Others assume they’re for CB radio or off-road communication. The truth is far simpler — and way more practical — than most people realize.
These sticks are vent tubes for transfer fuel tanks.
Many truck owners add an extra fuel tank in the bed of the truck, especially those who haul long distances, work construction, run generators, or operate farm equipment. These auxiliary tanks need proper venting to release pressure safely and prevent vacuum lock while fuel flows.
That tall black tube is the vent — designed to sit higher than the tank so fumes escape upward instead of collecting in the bed of the truck.
Why are they getting so common?
• More people are using dual-tank systems
• Off-road and work trucks rely on added fuel capacity
• Modern vent tubes are slim and look like antennas
Without the vent, the tank could malfunction, spill, or even pressurize dangerously. That little stick is what keeps everything safe and running smoothly.
So next time you spot one, you’re not looking at a mysterious tool or hidden device — you’re looking at a simple fuel-tank vent doing its job.
A tiny piece of equipment… with a big purpose.