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Want to relocate your gas tank?

WickedWindsor

Well-Known Member
Joined
March 8, 2005
Messages
245
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6
City, State
Ontario, Canada
Year, Model & Trim Level
351 powered, 1991 XLT 4x4
To start off, I don't intend this to be a "how to" so I'm not liable for any misled info on a project like this undertaking.

I was looking for a new project and something that had not been done. New and different was what I was looking for.
Down the road, I wanted to rig up some sort of anti-wrap bar for my rear axle. Not yet knowing what kind of setup I wanted, I knew that my options would be limited because of where the stock gas tank is located directly in front of the axle.
I thought that by moving the location of the gas tank to the rear behind the axle would do two things. It would allow me to put whatever kind of anti-wrap bar in as well as provide more ground clearance under the belly of my truck.
What fuel tank would fit in the spot of the spare tire and allow me to run stock fuel injection? I could use a Broncoll tank. I've seen a couple installs as a second/auxillary tank in some EX's. For me though, they hung down too low defeating my second goal for more ground clearance. After much research on fuel tanks I found that I needed to use a Ford tank to simplify things. A full size Bronco tank would fit between the frame rails but is also too tall for my liking 31-7/8" x 22-1/4" x 15-3/4" .
An F150 rear tank is shallow enough but too long and wide for my project 34-3/4" x 27" x 7-7/8".
What I settled on was a rear tank for a '91 E150 33-1/2" x 23-1/2" x 11-1/8".
With my 2" body lift, I measured that it would fit just right in depth and perimeter.
With all these measurements, I also was planning to have to relocate the shocks in front of the axle as well. Therefore by any means, this is NOT a bolt in project with all aspects of it being fabricated. If you can weld though, this is a fairly mild project to undertake.

Here is the tank out of the box.
001.jpg


I started by first removing the spare tire cross bar and upper shock mount by grinding off the rivets.
002.jpg


A notch had to be taken out of the body in this area to clear the fill hose connection for the tank. This also shows the rear upper tank mount.
003.jpg


Here, you can see the new upper shock mount I made from 2x2 square tubing. I designed it to clear the body by 1". Just before that is the forward tank support.
004.jpg

I used rubber hose to isolate the tank from the crossbar/upper tank mount.
005.jpg


I made new lower shock mounts to turn the base of the shock 90 degrees so the axle could have more freedom to flex without stress on the shock bushing.
006.jpg


Shocks and tank straps in place.
007.jpg


Tank in place.
008.jpg


Rear mount for straps. I drilled two 3/8" holes in the rear crossmember for the new strap bolts.
009.jpg


Front strap crossmember. Slotted holes in 1 1/2" angle steel.
010.jpg
 



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Forward view of tank in place.
31.jpg
32.jpg


Lots of clearance over axle. I have a SOA setup that would be necessary or at the least, a 2" suspension lift.
33.jpg


View from drivers side of tank in place.
34.jpg


Forward tank crossmembers.
35.jpg


By using two Explorer fill hoses, I was able to make the new one. The filler neck is 2" and so is the nipple on the new tank. The stock hose necks down to 1 1/2" where the 1 1/2 - 2" hose coupler resides.
36.jpg


Lots of ground clearance. Bottom of tank lines up almost directly with the bottom of the frame rails. I may get around to making a new skid plate someday.
37.jpg
38.jpg


Some of the fuel fittings I used.
39.jpg


Fuel lines in their new home.
40.jpg


I tried using the E150 sending unit with a Mustang 190lph pump. To use the pump, I had to bend the supply tube away from the pump about 3/4" to allow the pump to fit in its spot. The stock E150 pump is shorter than the Mustang pump. The stock Explorer pump will fit fine however.
Once installed, the gas gauge didn't read the proper level, so out it came with a trip to the voltmeter. The resistance is setup the opposite of the Explorer. What I did to correct this was install the stock Ex sending unit onto the E150 pickup assembly. To do this, I had to drill two new holes into the E150 pickup assembly. The float was totally in the wrong spot but a calculated bend of the float wire made the new assembly perfect.
I dropped the tank back in and - whala - gas gauge works fine again.
 






Nice mod and writeup!
Questions. How many gallon is the tank? Is the filler tube running up to the stock fuel door? Looks like you have a bodylift. How much did that help the tank fit? What's the story on those bumpstops? They are funky/cool. :cool:
 






Great writeup, and GREAT work man!

That tank almost looks a little smaller than stock, maybe I missed it, did you say how many gallons it was?
 






Based on the dimensions he gave, its probably stock sized, if not bigger. If the tank held exactly as much fuel as its outer dimensions, and was a cube, it would hold 37.83 gallons ;)
 






Nice mod and writeup!
Questions. How many gallon is the tank? Is the filler tube running up to the stock fuel door? Looks like you have a bodylift. How much did that help the tank fit? What's the story on those bumpstops? They are funky/cool. :cool:

It's a 22gal tank. I have a 2" body lift. Without a BL it would hang approx2" lower.
The bumpstops are from a '97 GMC Sonoma. Direct bolt in.
The filler tube is running to the stock filler neck.
 






I had this idea 3 years ago, it's documented in my SAS thread. I still have everything, I just never figured out how to get the fuel pump to work sense the mine is a '99 and not sure if OBD2 will get inthe way. I've trying to get a factory ex pump to fit. :rolleyes:

Good to see it works;):thumbsup:

tank2.jpg
 






Looks very cool! If I did something like this I would route the exhaust out the side as I would never be comfortable with how close it is to the tank.
 






Looks very cool! If I did something like this I would route the exhaust out the side as I would never be comfortable with how close it is to the tank.

That's what I was thinking, I would at least add a heat shield.
 






That's what I was thinking, I would at least add a heat shield.

Not to worry. Lots of cars, including Mustangs, have the exhaust running right beside the tank. There's an inch gap between the tank and the pipe. I doubt you'd be able to ignite the gas inside from heat alone anyway if fumes aren't involved. The heat would have to be pretty intense and the tank be pretty near empty for the gas to heat up from a tailpipe. Just my thoughts...
ford_mustang_lxrear_view.jpg
 






Where did you get these fuel tank measurements?
 












Awesome, thank you. I was trying to find a replacement gas tank retailer that gave measurements to no avail.
 






or if u want use a boat fuel cell or cut the the floor to fit a lip of a cherokee gas tank and then get a jy skid plate. it adds a s/l of ground clearance not sure which one im going to do on overkill
 






hey great writeup. I am sorry to say that you are not the first to relocate a new tank behind the axle, I have used a bronco 2 tank behind the axle of my 93. The bronco 2 tank fit very well as well, and looks very similar to your f-150 tank. Nice job the install came out great.
 






oh and also, my factory explorer sending unit and pump went right into the bronco 2 tank, just used a brake line bender to put a slight bend in the pickup tube and return tube. And the filler hose was very easy to modify to route to the factory gas door location, this may be another tank to ponder using, my truck is bagged and the floor bbehind the rear seat is raised 3" so the tank should also work with around a 2" bodylift although having the tank tucked up in there with bags is pretty important but i have no clearance issues.
 












I was looking for a new project and something that had not been done. New and different was what I was looking for.
 






whoops, thats a quote from his first post, I assumed that this quote was him saying that this had never been done, If i have misinterpreted I appologize
 



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I hadn't seen an E150 gas tank installed in an Explorer before. I don't claim to be the first, I just couldn't find anybody who'd done a writeup on it yet. Just trying to help others who might be thinking outside the box.

The tank is still working great by the way. Lots of ground clearance which is great because I have yet to make a skid plate.

The only downside I can see to this so far is the lack of baffles inside this particular tank although it's just a little extra sloshing and doesn't affect performance at all.
 






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