I done went and got myself into an internet argument and I'm too stubborn to drop it.
Conversation started with a question by a guy on the NC Miata page of the Book of Faces: "So a Google search says that the NC1 fuel tank holds 12 gallons. (One search says 12.7)
So when my needle is on the empty mark, I still have 2 gallons (or 16%) of fuel left in the tank?
Is this the same in every NC or is my fuel gauge not working right?"
My response was the: "The reason that the tank is not "empty" at empty is because the fuel cools the pump during operation and the more you run it below E the hotter the pump gets and the greater the failure rate becomes. Personally I suggest that 1/4 be your new E."
To which I brought every shiny happy person to the internet.
Someone posted "I pulled a Toyota pump out and it ran 2 months before failing!" Really? Why did you pull it out then?
Then someone called bullshlitz and said "The fuel cools it by going through it" which I never said it didn't, I just stated that there is a false empty to protect the pump from overheating, i did not not include stopping additional heat from starvation as the reason for leaving fuel in. Then I made the fourth mistake of... continuing: "So essentially every car performs the same as a Hellcat? No, that's not how it works.
I am generalizing in my statement about the fuel keeping the pump cool. Some cool by internal flow and others through submersion. Some OE units are great at it and others are not. Go ask a GM owner away there is a door cut out of his bed right above the fuel pump.
With different manufacturers come different specifications and different designs. Some of the fuel pumps are seen as a design priority and last forever. Toyotas are generally Denso pumps and seem to last forever. Ford pumps are often manufactured to a specific economic point and as such are frequently a little more prone to failure. The funny thing about that statement is that for a very long time Ford cultivated it's supplier network and the supplier network of it's subsidiaries like Aston Martin, Jaguar, Land Rover and Mazda. Why does this matter. Well because there's a pretty good chance that your OE Miata pump is no different than that of a Focus or Fusion or Mazda 3 or any other pump that was likely built to a lower quality point than other manufacturers.
IN GENERAL it is a good idea to keep your tank above 1/4 because the likelihood that you have a pump cooled primarily by external thermal interaction is actually very high." I need to not be on the lines at break.
So all my Subject Matter Experts, can I get condensed ruling as to WHY E does not mean actual empty?