One year later, and I still have fuel backing up in the fill neck and cutting the fill nozzle off. You have to slowly fill the fuel to keep the nozzle from cutting off. There are also other Freedom 215 owners having this same issue. I have been chasing the cause of this issue, and spent hours troubleshooting this issue. So far, to eliminate restrictions I have removed the charcoal canister on the vent side, and replaced it with a piece of 5/8” marine gas vent hose. I removed the check valve inside the 1 1/2” fill hose at the tank, to eliminate this as any restriction in the fill hose. I unhooked the vent hose and blew through it with air pressure to make sure it was not clogged. I have checked both the fill hose and the vent hose for any kinks, and found none. I believe this is a design issue on the 215 Freedom with the routing of the fill hose and the height that it is at on it‘s route to the tank. If you look through the deck access plate at the front of the fuel tank where the fill hose and the vent hose connect, you can see that where the fill hose connects to the the fill neck on the tank is about 3/4” to 1” high from the top of the tank. Where the fill hose comes through the rigging pipe in the boat to the fuel tank, the fill hose is level with the the top of the tank. I believe that this rise in the hose from this point to the fill neck on the fuel tank is enough rise in the hose elevation to cause the issue we are having. Filling the boat on the trailer is not as bad as on the water, because I can jack up the front of the trailer with the tongue jack and a 4x4 block, and I can fill the fuel tank at as faster flow rate than on the water, but it will still cutoff some when filling. If I try to fill it up on the water at a marina, it takes forever, because you have to fill it very slowly. You can hear good airflow coming out of the vent fitting when filling it up, so there is not a restriction in that line. I have been working on this issue on my own, because I am the second owner, so I could not take it back to the dealer. For an $85,000 boat, it is really frustrating not to be able to put fuel in the boat at a normal flow rate. It takes 20-30 minutes to fill the boat up, and if you use it a lot, that gets REALLY frustrating! I have attached some pictures of the fuel fill hose height in relation to the top of the fuel tank as I described above. On another subject, I have also had issues with the port side console door for the head popping open when I get in some choppy water. It popped open 6 times last evening when I was on the water, and there was a lite chop. The door latches for both console doors do not close tight, The hatch door latch under the port side passenger seat is really loose, and they all have loose movement when closed. I have been disappointed with the loose door latches, the head compartment door regularly popping open, and the gas fill issue. I believe it will take a change in the height/drop of the fill hose to the fuel tank to resolve this issue. I have even thought about installing another fill port on the starboard side more inline with the fill neck on the tank, so that the fuel has a straighter route to the tank, but I am a little hesitant to do that to such an expensive boat.