Fuel Tank Capacity Calculator

Rebbeca Jones

Rebbeca Jones

Fuel Tank Capacity Calculator

Calculate fuel tank volume, range, and weight distribution for vehicle design and trip planning

Clearance to ground minimum 150mm for passenger vehicles

Steel: 1.5-2.5mm, Plastic: 3-5mm, Aluminum: 2-3mm

Usable fuel excludes reserve. Warning light typically at 10-15%

Rarely filled to 100% (expansion space required)

What Is a Fuel Tank Capacity Calculator?

A Fuel Tank Capacity Calculator is a tool that calculates:

  • Total tank volume (in liters)
  • Usable fuel capacity after reserve
  • Estimated driving range
  • Fuel weight at full and typical fill
  • Design safety considerations

It works for different tank shapes such as:

  • Rectangular or saddle tanks
  • Cylindrical (round) tanks
  • Elliptical (oval) tanks
  • Custom tanks with known volume

This makes it useful for:

  • Vehicle designers
  • Automotive engineers
  • Kit car builders
  • Motorsport teams
  • Overland and RV planners

Tank Shapes Supported by the Calculator

Different vehicles use different fuel tank shapes. The calculator adjusts its formula based on the selected shape.

1. Rectangular / Saddle Fuel Tank

A rectangular tank is common in passenger cars and custom builds. It is simple to calculate:

Formula:
Volume = Length × Width × Height

The calculator also subtracts wall thickness to calculate the inner usable volume.

Best for:

  • Standard passenger vehicles
  • Flat underbody installations
  • Budget builds

2. Cylindrical (Round) Fuel Tank

Cylindrical tanks are often used in:

  • Racing fuel cells
  • LPG conversions
  • Custom builds

Formula:
Volume = π × radius² × length

The calculator reduces the radius based on wall thickness to calculate the real internal capacity.


3. Elliptical (Oval) Fuel Tank

Elliptical tanks are used when space is limited and ground clearance is important.

Formula:
Volume = π × semi-major axis × semi-minor axis × length

This shape balances strength and space efficiency.


Why Wall Thickness Matters

Fuel tanks are not hollow shells. Material thickness reduces internal capacity.

Typical wall thickness:

  • Steel: 1.5 to 2.5 mm
  • Plastic: 3 to 5 mm
  • Aluminum: 2 to 3 mm

The calculator subtracts twice the wall thickness from each dimension. This ensures accurate internal volume instead of just external size.

A 2 mm wall can reduce capacity by several liters in large tanks.


Fuel Types and Density

Different fuels have different densities. Density affects fuel weight.

Fuel TypeDensity (kg/L)
Gasoline (Petrol)0.75
Diesel0.85
Ethanol / E850.79
Biodiesel0.88
LPG0.54
CNG0.18

The calculator uses these density values to compute:

  • Full tank fuel weight
  • Typical fill weight
  • Weight distribution impact

Heavier fuel means more load on the chassis and suspension.


Reserve Level and Usable Capacity

Most vehicles keep a reserve fuel portion. The warning light usually activates at 10% to 15%.

If your tank is 60 liters and reserve is set to 10%:

  • Total capacity = 60 L
  • Reserve = 6 L
  • Usable fuel = 54 L

The calculator automatically excludes reserve fuel when calculating maximum driving range.


Typical Fill Level

Fuel tanks are rarely filled to 100%.

Why?

  • Fuel expands with heat
  • Expansion space prevents overflow
  • Industry standard requires around 5% vapor space

If fill level is set to 90%, the calculator adjusts weight and range accordingly.


Fuel Consumption and Driving Range

The calculator supports multiple fuel consumption units:

  • L/100 km
  • MPG (US)
  • MPG (Imperial)
  • km/L

It converts everything into liters per 100 km internally.

Range Formula

Range = (Usable Fuel ÷ Consumption) × 100

Example:

  • Usable fuel: 54 L
  • Consumption: 8 L/100 km

Range = (54 ÷ 8) × 100 = 675 km

The tool also calculates:

  • Maximum range
  • Typical range (based on fill level)
  • Reserve-only range

This is useful for:

  • Trip planning
  • Remote travel
  • Fleet management

Fuel Weight and Vehicle Handling

Fuel weight significantly affects vehicle performance.

Example:

  • 70 L gasoline tank
  • Gasoline density = 0.75 kg/L

Fuel weight = 52.5 kg

That is like carrying an extra passenger at all times.

The calculator also:

  • Warns if fuel weight exceeds 80 kg
  • Estimates weight ratio relative to a 1500 kg vehicle
  • Suggests half-tank strategy for efficiency

Mounting the tank low and between axles improves stability and reduces weight transfer during braking.


Ground Clearance Warning

For rectangular tanks, height matters.

  • Minimum 150 mm clearance for passenger vehicles
  • 200 mm or more for SUVs and trucks

If tank depth exceeds 300 mm, the calculator warns about clearance risk.

This prevents scraping and structural damage.


Design and Safety Standards

The calculator includes design guidance based on common engineering practice.

It estimates:

  • 5% expansion space
  • Filler neck volume
  • Rollover valve volume

For gasoline and ethanol:

  • Vapor recovery system (EVAP/ORVR) required

For diesel:

  • Water separator recommended

For LPG and CNG:

  • Pressure-rated certified containment required

These design notes help ensure safety compliance during fabrication.


Who Should Use a Fuel Tank Capacity Calculator?

This tool is ideal for:

  • Automotive engineers
  • DIY vehicle builders
  • Motorsport fabricators
  • Overlanding enthusiasts
  • Fleet operators
  • Marine and off-road vehicle designers

It removes guesswork and reduces costly mistakes.


Practical Example: Custom Rectangular Tank

Let’s say you design a tank with:

  • Length: 800 mm
  • Width: 500 mm
  • Height: 200 mm
  • Wall thickness: 2 mm

The calculator:

  1. Subtracts wall thickness
  2. Computes inner volume
  3. Applies reserve percentage
  4. Calculates fuel weight
  5. Estimates driving range

Instead of manually calculating each step, the tool delivers results instantly and accurately.


Benefits of Using This Calculator

  • Accurate internal volume calculation
  • Automatic unit conversion
  • Fuel density-based weight analysis
  • Range estimation
  • Safety design recommendations
  • Weight distribution insight

It saves time and reduces human error.