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#1
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Quote:
I gotta feelin the reason fuel pickups started coming from the top was to ELIMINATE possibility of bottom leakage (also makes servicing from the top easier too)...what I was thinking is a "J" shaped pic-up tube...long end welded to a hole in the bottom, short end turns down and has filter screen 1-2" above the bottom..what the heck...there's a thousand ways to skin the same cat...here kitty, kitty...
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'74 V-20/ BF 150 '95 V-21/ BF 150 '84 V-20/ 200 2.4 Merc '87 V-20/'18 F150 Yamaha |
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#2
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1987 V20 w/1987 150HP Yamaha on a Shoreland'r Trailer 1978 16.5 Airslot w/1996 120HP Force on a Four Winns trailer 1996 V21 w/1993 200HP Mercury on a Shoreline Trailer All towed by a 5.7L Hemi Durango. If God didn't have a purpose for us we wouldn't be here, so Live simply, Love generously, Care deeply, Speak kindly. (Leave the rest to God) ![]() Silence, in the face of evil, is itself evil. Not to speak is to speak, not to act is to act. God will not hold us guiltless. |
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#3
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Connecting tanks below the deck could also drain BOTH tanks to the bilge. Then any leak on either tank would drop to the level of the hole. Also a slight list would probably let a bit of gas vent overboard as the tanks sought their level side to side. I am a fan of the 20 gallon saddle tanks, above the floor and it keeps any leakage obvious.
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