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Fuel Lines
Dave Write - 3/11/05 at 10:11 AM

Another idea I had was to run the fuel lines under the floor pan, and protecting the lines with polyethylene (plastic) strips running parallel with the fuel lines, thus giving it a 'wear strip' so that if the car does knock the floor plan, the fuel lines are protected from any damage. I have a friend building as well and he said he saw that the Westfields fuel lines run under the floorplan and they are proctected, how I dunno, he never managed to see under the car.

Has anyone ventured this road previously, or any suggestions would be greatly appreciated


jambojeef - 3/11/05 at 10:55 AM

Have you got major space issues on your tranny tunnel?

I would route them through there every time - saves quite a bit of hassle - I know some people have had problems with SVA testers claiming that pipes could get pinched by the movement of the diff but Im going to chance it

Geoff


ayoungman - 3/11/05 at 11:05 AM

I would definately steer clear of putiing any fuel,brake lines on the underside of the car unless your ground clearance is unusually high. It just is'nt worth the additional worry.


JAG - 3/11/05 at 11:21 AM

I ran my fuel and brake pipes along the top of the transmission tunnel and made a round top for the tunnel to cover it all.

Have a look in my photo archive for piccies.


wilkingj - 4/11/05 at 08:15 AM

DONT put them below the level of the floor on the underside. They are exposed, and dangerous.

THINK:
70 mph... hit a bump... ground the fuel lines and chassis... breaks open the fuel pipe... chassis makes spark on the road... Instant Mobile Crematorium..

DONT DO IT.
They are safer and better placed in the tunnel, and safer.


Dave Write - 8/11/05 at 06:06 AM

Thanks for your suggestions guys, I eventuallly decided to run the lines on the top of the tunnel, out of the way of everything.

Regards
Dave