View Single Post
Old 05-09-2011, 12:06 AM   #124 (permalink)
cossie1600
A True Z Fanatic
 
cossie1600's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: californee way
Posts: 5,380
Drives: 370, Leaf
Rep Power: 30
cossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond reputecossie1600 has a reputation beyond repute
Default

Quote:
Originally Posted by spearfish25 View Post
There is no way the pickup is at the top of the tank. You'd 'run out' of fuel every time you used a few gallons.

Much more likely is the pickup is at the bottom, but either the tank design or the pump internals have a problem with lateral g's. Tank design would suggest all the fuel sloshes away from the pump and the pickup can grab air. Pump design would be more difficult to assign blame (aside from pickup location), but raises my suspicion as the reason when fuel starvation occurs with a full tank. I don't know how a full tank can slosh enough for the bottom of the pump to be exposed to air.
I was chatting with my buddy about this. How about wire a regular fuel pump on the fuel sending unit side and just dump the outlet back on the passenger side for the fuel pump. It would just be a constant recirculating fuel pump and cost virtually nothing
cossie1600 is offline   Reply With Quote