This is one of those things that can make you go crazy! It should be a straight forward job, but getting everything to line up properly is really tough! I persevered and eventually got everything square.
Here it is drilled and clecoed in place !
I kept the aux tank transfer fuel lines high in the wing.
The aux tanks use a facet fuel pump to transfer fuel from the aux tanks to the main tanks. I made sure that there was no interference with the aileron bell crank and the fuel lines.
The main fuel lines came out of the tank and needed to go through part of the rib. In this case a doubler was needed since the hole was through part of the lightening hole. Some people have used fittings to go around the rib here, but I was really striving for clean fuel system with a few direction changes as possible.
Here you can see that I decided to tee the aux fuel line into the top sight gauge line. This allows for the fuel to not only fill the main tank, but also back fill down the sight gauge and push the little orange ball down, while fuel is being transferred. When the aux fuel is being transferred and when the aux tank is empty will be clearly evident.
I got focused at the task at hand that I forgot to take pictures of the process. This is the only picture I took! Sorry!
I created a water level system and spent the better part of a day leveling the fuselage and aligning the wings. Every adjustment made something else change.
After finally getting everything set, I used a set of drill guides to step drill the wing mounts. This is one of those things that you don’t want to mess up thankfully it went perfectly!
The main tanks are already cut, but the aux tank holes aren’t. So masked out the area to protect the aluminum before I cut.
I used a jig saw to rough cut the skin. Then used a large vixen file to take it to the proper deminsion. So much filing!!!
You can see I wasn’t quite done filing yet. I took a break to layout all the nutplate holes and counter sunk them.