No, I knew you weren't. I was mostly explaining the Baitfish2 story. I still do not have a door over my rear tank.
As for dropping the tank, my front tank is easy as long as its empty. I have pulled it by myself before.
Prop it up with a 2X4, take loose the two bolts that hold the straps on and disconnect the filler hose. Then knock the board away, lower it down by hand until I can get to the wiring and fuel line hookups then slide it out.
The rear tank is a whole 'nother breed of cat. Spare tire holder, welded in trailer hitch bar, all kinds of other stuff, not to mention like most tanks, its going to be full when it quits, and you are looking at a two or three man job with a transmission jack minimum.
Its easier to pull the body for that one. I wanted to put in the door to figure out what was intermittent but never got around to it.
Lately a good friend of mine has branched out and put in a really nice shop. Actually, he put in a really nice shop, then Michel came along and totally destroyed it. He is in a temporary rented building now until he can rebuild.
But, he has the manpower and equipment to make pulling the rear tank easy. Big 4 post lift, auxiliary lifts on it, and a transmission jack.
So, he worked me in a couple of months ago. After several tests, we decided it had to be the pump. So, we put in a brand new Motorcraft. It ran for about 3 miles and died. We put in a second one. After we got the tank buttoned back up, we realized we had lost the gauge.
Rather than pull it again right then, I decided to drive it for a while. About the second tankfull, it quit working again. Not sure if its just low on gas or a bad pump. I don't want to fill it up in case its the pump, so I'm just using the front tank for now. Later this month, its going back in to find out what is going on and have some other stuff done to get it ready for hunting season.
But, at this point, I am seriously considering a door even after dropping the tank..........