I recently threw together a quick profile plane to test out an engine I built. I figured that a balloon tank would work best for this application, but I wanted something that would be easier to fill than the ones I used previously. Kind of like my bladder tanks with a check valve on the back of the bladder. I’m sure I’m not the first person to do it this way, but I’ve never seen this described before anywhere.
I used a standard 9” party balloon, a section of medium fuel tubing, two bladder fittings from Texas Timers, a section of small tubing, a fuel tube stopper, an a couple of pieces of wire.

First thing I did was make a nick at the end of the balloon. I then use a hole punch to take a couple of nibbles out of the medium fuel tubing, then put a fitting on each side of the tube and slid it inside the balloon. The small side of the bladder fitting is a tight fit through the nick. I changed my mind about using the pieces of wire and just used a small cable tie on the fittings on both sides. I slipped the small tubing on the large side of the balloon, which will be the back where I fill the balloon. The other side fitting will be attached to the tube from the engine nipple. The fuel tube stopper will plug the back after filling.




I pumped up the balloon with a fueling syringe and capped it off with another stopper. The volume was more than I would use for fuel on a normal engine run.

I left it for a half hour and it stayed pumped up, so if it will hold air for that long then it’ll hold fuel for a five minute run. Yes, yes. I know, it's a balloon tank and isn't pressurized...
Just another way to do it.
Mark