MrShawn305
Active member
- 168
- 98
- 28
- Location
- El Paso, TX
Hey everyone, I was MIA for a while there. Had alot going on around here and just haven't had time to be on the web. I finally got some time this week to mess around with my 802a fuel setup and was able to come up with a solution.
So a local guy near me deals in scrap and vehicle dismantling. He had a square (more rectangular, actually) fuel tank off of either a school bus or a box truck. It has the mounting hardware still on it and everything, makes for a great skid or surface to mount/weld to. So here is the part I was struggling with for a long time: How to interface the -5 (5/16" JIC) on the gen to the 1/2" compression fitting on the aux fuel tank pickup.
I pulled the fuel pickup tube out of the fuel tank and started looking at it closely. It appears to be a 3/8" NPT with a dip tube brazed into it. So I took my aux hose and the pickup tube down to my local hydraulics shop and showed them what I have and what I need. After a few minutes of brainstorming and looking at our various options, I said "what if I cut this tube off and braze it onto a new fitting?". He looked at it and said that he could probably remove it there and try brazing it if I wanted. I said let's try it. So he had a 3/8" NPT to 5/16" JIC elbow in stock and sure enough was able to unbraze the dip tube from the old fitting and braze the tube to the new one. He also has what he needed to make me a fuel hose for it to go from JIC to JIC in whatever length I wanted. So now I have a ~50 gallon aux tank that is easily hooked up and requires no modification to the generator. Also, I don't have a whole bunch of different fittings trying to adapt one thing to the other that could potentially leak. I'll add some photos later today or this weekend as I don't plan to install it for another week or so. I need to change out the aux fuel/no fuel switch in the tank.
I figure this is a cheap (tank cost me $60 and the hose/brazing/fitting cost me $20 and some change) option for people wanting to get a multi day capacity fuel tank for their gen without having a drum sitting near it. These are DOT rated and designed for fuel, they have the correct venting and should be pretty resistant to water ingress.
So a local guy near me deals in scrap and vehicle dismantling. He had a square (more rectangular, actually) fuel tank off of either a school bus or a box truck. It has the mounting hardware still on it and everything, makes for a great skid or surface to mount/weld to. So here is the part I was struggling with for a long time: How to interface the -5 (5/16" JIC) on the gen to the 1/2" compression fitting on the aux fuel tank pickup.
I pulled the fuel pickup tube out of the fuel tank and started looking at it closely. It appears to be a 3/8" NPT with a dip tube brazed into it. So I took my aux hose and the pickup tube down to my local hydraulics shop and showed them what I have and what I need. After a few minutes of brainstorming and looking at our various options, I said "what if I cut this tube off and braze it onto a new fitting?". He looked at it and said that he could probably remove it there and try brazing it if I wanted. I said let's try it. So he had a 3/8" NPT to 5/16" JIC elbow in stock and sure enough was able to unbraze the dip tube from the old fitting and braze the tube to the new one. He also has what he needed to make me a fuel hose for it to go from JIC to JIC in whatever length I wanted. So now I have a ~50 gallon aux tank that is easily hooked up and requires no modification to the generator. Also, I don't have a whole bunch of different fittings trying to adapt one thing to the other that could potentially leak. I'll add some photos later today or this weekend as I don't plan to install it for another week or so. I need to change out the aux fuel/no fuel switch in the tank.
I figure this is a cheap (tank cost me $60 and the hose/brazing/fitting cost me $20 and some change) option for people wanting to get a multi day capacity fuel tank for their gen without having a drum sitting near it. These are DOT rated and designed for fuel, they have the correct venting and should be pretty resistant to water ingress.