I saw a thread a few months ago about some issues with the fuel tank, but thought I'd mention something here in case others aren't aware of this significant issue. Plus I want to vent a little.
I have a 2015 Axis T23. It reportedly has a 67 gallon fuel tank. I was 30 miles from the dock yesterday and was showing a quarter tank flat on the water. Cruising with a decent load I typically get about 2 miles per gallon, so I figured I wouldn't put any more gas in. (I had 15 more gallons in 5 gallon containers on board.) I cruised in to the dock on plane the entire time, hit the no wake zone showing perhaps 1/8th tank while on plane and came off plane. The boat stopped running. The fuel gauge showed completely empty while flat. So I poured in 5 gallons. Fuel gauge still showed completely empty flat. Boat wouldn't start. So I poured in 5 more gallons. Fuel gauge still showed completely empty and still wouldn't start. So I poured in my last 5 gallons. At this point, the fuel gauge showed about 1/6th of a tank and it finally started. I idled for 5 or 10 minutes, then put it on the trailer. I subsequently was able to put in 52.5 gallons at the gas station. Assuming I burned a half gallon idling and including the 15 gallons I poured in, I put in all 67 gallons the tank is supposed to hold. Meaning the gauge on plane was reading 1/8th of a tank while the tank was on fumes.
Okay, no big deal. Gas gauges are never perfect. But what is really frustrating is I had to pour in 15 gallons just to start up? Meaning that last 10-15 gallons is useful only if you stay on plane? That sucks and decreases my presumed range (one of the main reasons I got the T23 with its bigger tank) dramatically.
Morals of the story?
1) The T23 really has a 55 gallon tank, the other 12 gallons are really just ballast.
2) If you're low on fuel, don't come off plane. I'm sure others in the no wake zone will hate you, but don't stop the boat until you're close enough to swim it onto the trailer.
3) When the gauge registers about 1/6th of a tank flat (maybe 1/4 on plane), you're within 5 gallons of it not starting up, and maybe not keeping running unless on plane.