After reading several posts about wing auxiliary fuel tanks I decided to eventually build an internal aux tank. My initial thoughts are to (when needed) replace the passenger seat with a fuel tank. Using 25 - 30 gallons as a target it should be in the 200lb range with the weight of the tank. At that size I gain about 3 hours of fuel depending on burn rate. I'm in the process of fabricating the fuselage and plan on adding the hard points to support securing the tank. Has anyone else done this?
Unanswered questions...
I am thinking the easiest method for fuel transfer is feed directly into the fuel selector valve. By that I mean a separate connection at the valve not a T connection into one of the main tank line. But this would require a fuel pump as the tank won't have enough gravity pressure to feed the engine. Given the discussions about fuel pumps is this plan a problem?
The fuel lines would be under the floor. All connections, power and fuel would be accessible at the floor (under a cover plate?) With a closed connection at the floor and the fuel selector out of the aux position there should not be any fuel leakage. If the aux position did leak it would only allow a small about of fuel into the line, the closed connection would prevent leaking into the cabin.
I think this will give me the additional range when I want it without adding the weight of the wing aux fuel tanks. I would only install and use the fuel tank on long journeys like flying to Oshkosh.
Any thoughts or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Scott
Unanswered questions...
I am thinking the easiest method for fuel transfer is feed directly into the fuel selector valve. By that I mean a separate connection at the valve not a T connection into one of the main tank line. But this would require a fuel pump as the tank won't have enough gravity pressure to feed the engine. Given the discussions about fuel pumps is this plan a problem?
The fuel lines would be under the floor. All connections, power and fuel would be accessible at the floor (under a cover plate?) With a closed connection at the floor and the fuel selector out of the aux position there should not be any fuel leakage. If the aux position did leak it would only allow a small about of fuel into the line, the closed connection would prevent leaking into the cabin.
I think this will give me the additional range when I want it without adding the weight of the wing aux fuel tanks. I would only install and use the fuel tank on long journeys like flying to Oshkosh.
Any thoughts or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Scott
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