I think dropping the tank is the simplest means to access the connectors, yes. If you're careful you may not have to disconnect the filler tube. Try to do the work with as little fuel in the tank as possible.. for obvious reasons. When I worked on mine, I used a spare electric fuel pump to drain the fuel - attaching it near the filter assy for ease of access.
As for the fittings - yes, where the lines meet just forward and near the top of the tank.. those disconnects don't seem to seal a vacuum well. I think the lines are ok, it's just the fittings that give us grief. I don't recall the details but others seem to have found a good solution.
In my case, I installed an in-tank pump but if you put an inline pump there (with sufficient capacity) the existing fittings should be fine as they'd be lightly pressurized; say, 2-10 psi accelerating under load with a new filter. You want the pump to maintain at least 0 psi until the filter needs replacement, if you can.
Mark
slasher wrote:
msilbernagel wrote:
consider replacing the snap connectors near the fuel tank with something that will not allow air in when under a vacuum from the engine mounted/driven Bosch CP3 fuel pump.
Thanks Mark, would I need to drop the tank to do that properly? It looks like its 4 x bolts holding it up and the jubilee clip holding the filler neck to the tank. I'm assuming the joints you mean are where the plastic pipes meet the steel ones and is it the plastic pipes I'd need to replace or just the joints?
Jim