(the other half would love to see some of my "junk" disappear...

).
My "other half" is a bigger pack-rat than I am, so she doesn't even notice the extra trucks, engines, and assorted paraphenalia that I accumulate.
For you guys who don't have such an understanding wife/concubine, whenever she starts harping that you need to get rid of a bunch of stuff, catch her gone for a few hours and put a bunch of her shoes and clothes in garbage bags, and set them out like you were headed to the dumpster.
When she demands to know if you have lost your mind and "just where do you think you are going with my stuff", answer with her own reply that she is never going to use that stuff anyway and you got tired of looking at it.
Enough marriage counseling for the moment; back to the business at hand.
I have just about entirely eliminated all of the original fuel system from my truck; but, lurking inside the frame for the last few feet going into the two stock fuel-tanks, is still some of the original plastic tubing, both DRAW and RETURN,
with rubber hose just slid over the plastic and double-clamped.
My intentions are :
1. Somehow attach a JIC fitting onto the plastic nipple at the fuel-tank outlet, either by epoxy-ing the JIC right onto the plastic, or by using a very short "adapter hose", then proceeding forward all the way to the manual tank-selector valves with high-quality hose.(both DRAW and RETURN)
2. Completely cut away the stock fuel inlets/outlets from the fuel-tank port/flange and replace them with JIC 90-degree "bulk-head" fittings, then devise my own "draw-straw" inside the tank, proceeding forward with high-quality hose.(both DRAW and RETURN)
I will probably go with option
2.
JIC is the way to go wherever liquid line fittings are used; any future need to remove a component is then a very simple leak-free task that is not at all dreaded like fighting with stuck-to-the-hose barb-type fittings, usually requiring the hose be cut off the fitting.
