I plan on doing the same. You can fit 5 gallons in there between the wing mounts front and back and between the wings without modifications.My aircraft will live in a trailer for part of it's life. Anything I can leave hooked up and on the fuselage is time saved.tom xl-7.
Hi, Guys.I've finished the ribs and am waiting for things to warm up here in Minnesota. I had this idea a few months ago. If my math is correct, (no promises here) a FOUR gallon airfoil shaped tank can be built to the dimensions of 24" L, 6" W, 6.4"H. I built to the inaccurate rib drawings provided in the plans, so I gain a bit in the height dimension. A ONE gallon header tank is placed in the forward fuselage. From what I've read this should allow for a cleaner routing of the fuel line and minimal CG issues. Is it worth the trouble and extra complexity? Maybe not... A 5 gallon fuselage fuel tank doesn't seem to be problem on Sam Buchanan's XL. Les Homan says in a video that there is trim change but his plane seems to fly fine. I have no idea how this would be mounted to the airframe, also, I am in no way an engineer so take this all with a grain of salt.
The idea of a header is something I have been interested in. Would it solve the problem of a rear drain losing fuel in a descent. I realize your not to plan on running out of fuel but if you saw air in your fuel tubing it would be nice to know the fuel was in the header.Tom XL-7
If you are looking for another tank location - the Sam Buchanan fabrication will challenge you skills... His fus location is about the lowest you can feed the dual Mikuni's with the (large orifice) gravity flow carb float inlet valves... IIRC Les has a tank that is a little less than 5 gallons... On a big tight 1/2 motor you can see nearly 3 gallons an hour consumption with a rich mixture... Fly away from the home field down wind and find you are too far out when you start grinding your way back...If you want to fly soon put the Team ready made tank in the wing... A tank over the tube between the front and back wing mount is a head room limiter, a bear to fabricate and the first thing your head rams in a roll over... An inch clearance between head and wing is common, the shoulder harness has to be really cinched to maintain that clearance... Carefully mock up the wing tank clearances if you are determined to go this way... The wing tank is a safety measure and a few minutes work to drain into a 5 gallon can when u take the wings off... Unlike the plans; put the tank in the right wing half and enter the cab from the left - no pilot fuel line interference and you can watch the evil fuel line air bubbles if they develop...