Crazy_Pilot
Active member
Short version: Can a solar battery tender and 12V battery be used to run a 12V fuel transfer pump? For say 30 gallons at a time, once a day.
Long version:
My flying club has a 500-gallon tank with a manual crank pump that we use to refuel our planes. It works, but when you've got an airplane with 50 gallon tanks that's a decent workout and a good chunk of time to be swinging a handle. That plus the fact that if you're working alone you have to frequently go back and forth from the pump to the plane to see how much fuel you've put in, or risk overflowing and spilling fuel all over the plane.
A powered pump would make life not only easier but safer as well. The problem is we don't have access to electrical power where the fuel tank is located. My current idea is to use a 12V transfer pump that is typically used in pickup bed tanks, powered by a 12V battery and maintained by a solar battery tender.
Pump: http://www.fillrite.com/index.cfm/products/productdetail/?p=111&ps=80
Battery tender: http://www.batterytender.com/Solar/15-Watt-Solar-Tender-Charger-With-Built-in-Controller.html
The tender and battery would be mounted in a frame and a trenched cable run from the power station to the fuel tank. I would use a few patio stones in the base of the frame to weigh it down and keep and winds from blowing it over. The battery would live in a box above that with solid sides and top and a mesh base (one side hinged for access), and above that would be the solar panel on a tilt adjustable frame. See the attached picture for a basic idea.
I'd appreciate any thoughts or input from people more experienced that me. I think it should work but I've never put something like this together before so I'm a bit in the dark.
Long version:
My flying club has a 500-gallon tank with a manual crank pump that we use to refuel our planes. It works, but when you've got an airplane with 50 gallon tanks that's a decent workout and a good chunk of time to be swinging a handle. That plus the fact that if you're working alone you have to frequently go back and forth from the pump to the plane to see how much fuel you've put in, or risk overflowing and spilling fuel all over the plane.
A powered pump would make life not only easier but safer as well. The problem is we don't have access to electrical power where the fuel tank is located. My current idea is to use a 12V transfer pump that is typically used in pickup bed tanks, powered by a 12V battery and maintained by a solar battery tender.
Pump: http://www.fillrite.com/index.cfm/products/productdetail/?p=111&ps=80
Battery tender: http://www.batterytender.com/Solar/15-Watt-Solar-Tender-Charger-With-Built-in-Controller.html
The tender and battery would be mounted in a frame and a trenched cable run from the power station to the fuel tank. I would use a few patio stones in the base of the frame to weigh it down and keep and winds from blowing it over. The battery would live in a box above that with solid sides and top and a mesh base (one side hinged for access), and above that would be the solar panel on a tilt adjustable frame. See the attached picture for a basic idea.
I'd appreciate any thoughts or input from people more experienced that me. I think it should work but I've never put something like this together before so I'm a bit in the dark.
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