Does anyone know the actual capacity of the fuel cell? I've never drained then refilled mine to determine it. The Star Race Cars manual from 2010 says 19 gallons, which I simply cannot believe.
Does anyone know the actual capacity of the fuel cell? I've never drained then refilled mine to determine it. The Star Race Cars manual from 2010 says 19 gallons, which I simply cannot believe.
my 2004 car was 20 gallon tank I believe
From memory, I think the most I ever managed to pack in was just slightly shy of 19 gallons. (Not enough to go 100 miles at full throttle around The Milwaukee Mile)
Thanks for the quick replies. I am amazed. The tank on my Ram 2500 diesel truck isn't much bigger than that!
I haven't measured it exactly, but I've got a similar Star Race Car, and the 19-gallon figure does seem a bit high to me too. I'd say it's probably more in the range of 12-15 gallons based on my experience. But it could vary depending on the model and any modifications.
On mine, I believe was common, there is a small tube down thru the cell, so get a clear flexible tube (that tolerates gas) that fits down into that fixed tube. Push the flexible tube down into the cell until it bottoms, cover the top end of the tube so it holds the fuel level in the tube, carefully pull it out and read where the fuel level is in the tube. (you would need to "calibrate" the tube by pumping out the cell, then add a gallon at a time and mark it).
The filler neck is curved. A dowel doesn’t work
Pump the fuel out to measure. That way you don't have to worry about the fuel tower and surge tank. It also tells you how much you can actually pump out (this may or may not be all of the fuel in the cell, it depends on how well you have set up your tower and pick up)
I know I need roughly 5 gallons of fuel for a 30 minute session, so I just put that much in before each session. I also occasionally top it off and go a couple sessions before refueling. I only drive for fun, so I don't care about the extra weight. I've also been a pilot and flight instructor for nearly 40 years and there are three things that do a pilot no good: 1) runway behind you, 2) altitude above you, and 2) fuel in the fuel truck. That third one is probably the reason I don't mind more fuel on board than less.
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