OK was able to pull out the back seat and gain access to the panel that hides the fuel hat. After removing the feed like, and the pin connector, I knocked the retaining ring counter clockwise and freed up the hat to come out. Before the hat could be taken all the way out of the tank, there is a feed tube that looks like it connects over to the second "Saddle" of the fuel tank. I disconnected it and tied it up so that it didn't fall back into the tank. Now the tricky part was getting the new Division X fuel hat in.
The instructions say that you have to take off the fuel sender float arm and then reconnect it down in the tank. Who ever wrote these instructions forgot to mention that the fuel tank sits at a forward slant from the access hole . You are not able to put it back together in the tank. so I had to maneuver it into place all connected. I guess I will not know until I turn it on if the fuel sender float is stuck or not.
Also, when trying to reconnect the "saddle suction-feed hose" back, I realized that whoever at Division X pressed on the fitting the hose connects to, they must have pressed too hard because the end of the fitting was "mushroomed" and would not go into the connector. I had to pull it back out, use a cutting wheel to trim off the flared piece (maybe the thickness of a Nickel, de-burr it with a fine diamond file, and clean it off..... then go through the same pain again of reinstalling. The directions always say.... "it drops right in place of the stock unit" but take my word for it.... Not in this case.
The next portion is the wiring harness for this unit. Since it is in the trunk on the drivers side against the back wall, I removed the trunk liner on the driver side as well as the back trim panel.
I actually stopped there because I didn't understand the directions and wanted to call tech support before I went snipping wires. When you install the Division X dual pump hat, you do not use the stock harness connector anymore. The directions actually tell you to go into the trunk, find the Violet wire, and that wire gets soldered on and heat shrinked into this hefty harness they supply. This harness in turn has a bunch of relays and then a power wire that runs up to the battery. What I couldn't wrap my hear around was this:
I disconnected the stock harness to the stock fuel hat before it was removed. There were 4 or 5 wires on this connector..... Now when I run the new 6 pin connector in the Division X harness, the only wire I am tapping into in the trunk is the Violet wire.... I didn't understand how the other 3 or 4 wires on the stock harness were no longer needed.
When I called tech support I got an answer. So apparently the Violet wire is the sender wire (which will ensure my gauge up front works, I am running power wires directly to the battery with this new harness, so I don't need to tap into the module in the trunk for that, I round the harness in the trunk, so I don't need to tap into the module for that, and the relays attached to the new harness take the place of whatever else is left. Basically he said that the Fuel control module in the trunk is no longer needed, but the new harness taps into it with the violet wire just so the fuel gauge works up front.
We will see I guess.....
Anyway, I am leaving the back seat out until I am able to turn the car on.... Since I will need to check for leaks.
Like so many have said.... these little things add up to be a huge pain in the butt. Building the Cammer was in essence the easier part LOL