This subject has popped up in the past. One solution that was passed around was to eliminate the 'sock' entirely. This is not a bad idea if the thing plugs repeatedly with tank contamination (rust?). A restriction (not a complete plugging) in the tank strainer will cause the engine mounted mechanical fuel pump to work hard; a drop in fuel pressure at the fuel pump inlet which with heat will encourage fuel vaporization in the line (vapor lock). Downside is that there MUST be a secondary downstream effective filtration system in place to protect the carburetor, needle and seat. If car has a booster pump back near the tank, there must be a filter before AND after the pump as is always spelled out in instruction sheets packaged with aftermarket electric fuel pump asemblies. Little tip; the addition of an inline filter is always a good idea for an older vehicle, (with or without a sock). And, I ran into a 3/8" inline metal canister filter (looked for all the world like a quality piece!) that was actually only a relatively course strainer; inside was wire (course weave) mesh only and not the filter media that is necessary to properly filter out crud. Part was second or third line, either AutoZone economy or Wix economy line. Filters we use are Wix 33032, 33033 to suit or AC Delco metal cannister filters and I know that they come with real filter media inside. Warren Anderson Sedona,AZ