We've been inspected six times now, and never had anyone comment on our fuel
line routing. We used stainless braided fuel line inside a steel pipe which
ran along the floor of our 53' Stude inside, on the passenger side. The
pipe was one solid piece, with open ends in the trunk and in front of the
firewall. My guess is that they like to see extra metal covering fuel line
in the plane of the flywheel/clutch.
Greg
Salt2salt.com
On 9/25/09 10:33 AM, "drmayf" <drmayf@mayfco.com> wrote:
> I see that the rule book permits fuel lines to be run into the cockpit
> area (3.I) provided they are steel or steel braid covered. I guess Steel
> Braid covered means SS braided hose. Having fuel in the drivers
> compartment seems anathema to me, but for sure it can be an easier way
> to run fuel lines. I am curious as to how many teams out there run the
> fuel lines into the drivers compartment and what experiences they have
> had with that method (ie inspection and redesign suggestions from
> inspectors). I am contemplating such a move. Why? Well, at WOS, I
> discovered a leaking fuel cell fitting up near the hot exhaust system
> feeding the turbo. I had put the fuel cell in front of the old radiator
> position to keep from having the fuel lines run into the drivers
> compartment or under the car when I had two old turbos in different
> locations that did not pose a heat threat to the fuel cell. I am now
> fabricating a new fuel cell to fit in the cramped trunk area and running
> the fuel lines through the drivers compartment would be much easier to
> do.
>
> Comments? Thoughts?
>
> mayf
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