Murray, you said a couple posts up:
"Another change in my XL is to make a four longeron tube fuse rather than the design three tube fuse, with a steel tube X brace in the center section. This might add to the drag/antidrag capability. Then I put thin nose ribs between each design nose rib to stiffen the D of the nose and that D contributes to the drag/antidrag capability."
I think of the fuselage as a comparatively rigid structure that the wing root is connected to. I think your 4 longeron structure with X brace will be as rigid as original. No problem there, but does not help the wing with drag/anti-drag issues.
Adding ribs in the nose will probably increase the drag resistance of the wing spar. I don't know how much, and if it is adequate, though.
Some here will remember the big fuss of the DE wing as represented in the plans from a few years ago (at least in the plans sets during that time, don't know if they were updated). The issue was that no compression struts were shown along the root end ribs. This got debated back and forth as to whether the struts were required, since the spars were attached to the fuselage near that point. The final answer came, I believe, from the engineer who designed the wing, who said that these struts were absolutely necessary. I personally did not see the need, but, even though our wing was covered and painted, we cut it open and installed the struts at the root end.
Vince, with his loading diagram, summed it all up. Is the tank a good structural replacement for the drag strut? I think it would be prudent to do some further analysis.