Well, I finally decided to rework my fuel system. The problem was when the system got very hot (105 ambient, 120 fuel) the fuel pressure would just go away and the pump would howl.
My original scheme was designed to fit under the floor, ahead of the rear axle in the space bounded by the frame rails, the cross member and the floor. I selected an RCI tank that fitted almost perfectly: 17 x 30 x 7.
This tank has a large area but is very shallow: not good for scavenging fuel at extreme angles. I designed a dual pick up system that would slide forwards and backwards and had valves that would close when they tried to draw air. It worked superbly: I could continue to pull fuel with very little in the tank at crazy angles.
Now back to the problem: getting stuck in the heat.
The (slight) restriction provided by the pickups coupled with the high fuel temperature caused the pump to cavitate. No pressure, lots of noise = stuck.
There was a secondary problem of the shocks hitting the tank but this only happened in extreme circumstances and did not appear to be doing any permanent damage, but I wanted to correct it all the same.
The root cause was the shape of the tank. The simple answer was to just mount a big honking tank in the back where the rear seat used to be.
This was vetoed by the dog.
More to come!!
My original scheme was designed to fit under the floor, ahead of the rear axle in the space bounded by the frame rails, the cross member and the floor. I selected an RCI tank that fitted almost perfectly: 17 x 30 x 7.
This tank has a large area but is very shallow: not good for scavenging fuel at extreme angles. I designed a dual pick up system that would slide forwards and backwards and had valves that would close when they tried to draw air. It worked superbly: I could continue to pull fuel with very little in the tank at crazy angles.
Now back to the problem: getting stuck in the heat.
The (slight) restriction provided by the pickups coupled with the high fuel temperature caused the pump to cavitate. No pressure, lots of noise = stuck.
There was a secondary problem of the shocks hitting the tank but this only happened in extreme circumstances and did not appear to be doing any permanent damage, but I wanted to correct it all the same.
The root cause was the shape of the tank. The simple answer was to just mount a big honking tank in the back where the rear seat used to be.
This was vetoed by the dog.
More to come!!
Comment