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Dual fuel tanks?


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Hey guys, I'm continung my quest every day to try and find a Bullnose I can keep an eye on for when I have the money. One feature (option) I noticed these trucks have, is the dual fuel tanks. if you guys have these, are they useful? being 16, fuel is probibly gonna be my #1 cost and was hoping this would help me save a bit of money and stop to fill up less. Lemme know what ya think! TBH, i would love to have a truck that had em!
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In my opinion, dual tanks are really only useful if you travel long distances and have a thirsty engine. My wife and I drove Dad's truck with a load of furniture from Oklahoma to Pennsylvania and back using only one tank, and it worked out fine. We could do ~200 miles/tank, and by then we were happy to get out and take a break.

The down side of dual tanks is the maintenance. The switching valves are notorious for problems and are expensive to replace - if you can find them.

To me, the best approach is to go with either a Bronco rear tank, which is 33 gallons, or the 38 gallon replacement Bronco tank. You now have essentially the same capacity as if you had two 19 gallon tanks, but no switching valve. However, there is a downside to this approach - you can't put the spare under the back of the truck, so it'll have to go in the bed.

 

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In my opinion, dual tanks are really only useful if you travel long distances and have a thirsty engine. My wife and I drove Dad's truck with a load of furniture from Oklahoma to Pennsylvania and back using only one tank, and it worked out fine. We could do ~200 miles/tank, and by then we were happy to get out and take a break.

The down side of dual tanks is the maintenance. The switching valves are notorious for problems and are expensive to replace - if you can find them.

To me, the best approach is to go with either a Bronco rear tank, which is 33 gallons, or the 38 gallon replacement Bronco tank. You now have essentially the same capacity as if you had two 19 gallon tanks, but no switching valve. However, there is a downside to this approach - you can't put the spare under the back of the truck, so it'll have to go in the bed.

Yeah, im not gonna be driving any long distances so i guess it would probibly hurt me more than help me. I could always buy a rig that had the dual tanks and only use the front one aswell.

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Yeah, im not gonna be driving any long distances so i guess it would probibly hurt me more than help me. I could always buy a rig that had the dual tanks and only use the front one aswell.

The switching valves changed quite a bit through the Bullnose years, and while some are worse than others, none are all that good. A simple single tank is the easiest to maintain.

As for what they can do, as Ray Cecil. His valve was pulling from one tank and returning to the other. Boy, was he getting bad MPG. We wound up taking the valve out of the equation and he ran on one tank. I'll bet his uncle, who has the truck, is still running on one tank.

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The switching valves changed quite a bit through the Bullnose years, and while some are worse than others, none are all that good. A simple single tank is the easiest to maintain.

As for what they can do, as Ray Cecil. His valve was pulling from one tank and returning to the other. Boy, was he getting bad MPG. We wound up taking the valve out of the equation and he ran on one tank. I'll bet his uncle, who has the truck, is still running on one tank.

Okay. That sounds like a better idea if i wind up with a dual tank truck, just take out the valves to the 2nd tank and run the truck off of the one tank? Correct me if i'm wrong.

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Okay. That sounds like a better idea if i wind up with a dual tank truck, just take out the valves to the 2nd tank and run the truck off of the one tank? Correct me if i'm wrong.

It depends on what you get. There were probably 4 different systems. But there's a way to make any of them single-tank systems by bypassing the valve.

And, if the truck has electric fuel pumps you get an interesting security feature. With the valve gone if you flip the switch on the dash to the other tank the fuel pump won't run. And who would think to flip the switch down by the air conditioning controls to get it to run? :nabble_smiley_evil:

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I could always buy a rig that had the dual tanks and only use the front one aswell.
Bad idea, unless the rear (unused) tank NEVER had fuel in it. Letting gas sit in a tank for decades wastes the gas and destroys the tank, the level sender, and the pump (if present). These are some that I've had to work on:

https://supermotors.net/getfile/859408/thumbnail/69rear.jpg

https://supermotors.net/getfile/198458/thumbnail/gastank3.jpg

https://supermotors.net/getfile/198460/thumbnail/gastank5.jpg

The best way to maintain a dual-tank truck is essentially the same as any other vehicle: USE IT as-designed. Run one tank low, and switch to the other. When that one starts getting low, fill the first. You don't have to drive around with both tanks full all the time, and you don't have to pick one tank to run from. Run from one AT A TIME, but alternate between them so neither sits for more than a year. 2 years is probably OK. 3 years is pushing your luck. By 6, the damage is done.

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It depends on what you get. There were probably 4 different systems. But there's a way to make any of them single-tank systems by bypassing the valve.

And, if the truck has electric fuel pumps you get an interesting security feature. With the valve gone if you flip the switch on the dash to the other tank the fuel pump won't run. And who would think to flip the switch down by the air conditioning controls to get it to run? :nabble_smiley_evil:

Ohh, thats so cool! ill defenetly keep that in mind if i get a dual tank truck!

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Ohh, thats so cool! ill defenetly keep that in mind if i get a dual tank truck!

Ask the seller if he has been using both tanks. If yes, continue doing so to keep both of them current. Most of the time, however, I think you will find that the PO had issues with one or the other tanks and has been running just one. My ‘81 had a gunky mid-ship tank that hadn’t been used in ages. I removed it and have been running just the rear tank since buying the truck. The only time I really wished for more capacity was during my Death Valley trip because gas inside the park was ~$5 per gallon.

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