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  #1  
Old 12-08-2005, 02:23 PM
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Payton King Payton King is offline
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Default tank

Who is doing your tank? Look to the left under Ricks Hot Rod Shop as their tanks are first rate and run a very big Aeromotive A1000 pump. That is what I have and I can get you some photos if you like. 21st CMS to the left also does tanks in aluminum and stainless.

All of your questions depends what the answers are to other questions, is that confusing enough.

If you are going to use a stock tank and modify it, depends on if you are running an intank pump or an external pump. The easiest thing to do if you are modifying a tank and it is a low horsepower deal is use an inline pump and a stock pick-up and sending unit for a 69 ss 350 car as the return is built into the sending unit. Make sure you vent the tank or use a vented cap.

The draw back to using an external pump is heat(pump getting hot in traffic in the middle of the summer) and noise but ease in service.

Intank pump will run cooler, quieter and a more clean installation, but a PITA to service as it involves dropping the tank. Also not the easiest to put into a stock tank.

Hard to baffel a stock tank so fuel slosh/starvation is a problem if you are going to go screaming around corners.

I believe on one of Mark Stielow's cars he put a sump in a stock tank and used an external pump...may have been the Red Witch.

Not sure if this helps are not.
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Old 12-08-2005, 04:21 PM
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That helps quite a bit.

What I am planning to do is build a tank similiar to John Parsons tank that he built for his too much project. I am going to fab the tank up myself. I wasn't planning on sumping the tank since I was running the internal fuel pump. I may check out the aeromotive pump if you believe that is a better route. I don't mind internal pumps because I really don't see myself dropping the tank too often and I won't be taking the car out on the track, just long hauls and cruising around.

My car isn't going to produce big HP but that is not the reason I building the car. I want something reliable and also halfway fuel effecient. I will consider adding a sump however if you feel this is a good route to go, but I do not plan on using a stock style tank.
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Old 12-08-2005, 05:30 PM
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Make sure to baffle or sump the tank to help keep the in tank pump submerged at all times. It will be the difference of the pump lasting a long time or not. I believe the return line is 5/16" also.

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Old 12-09-2005, 06:29 AM
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Default tank

What Mike said....make sure you baffle
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