Tomasz said:It's not the physical interference that matters. It's the amount of air and it's pressure changes when the temperature changes. Any volume of air that you'll add to the tank will throw off pressure changes in correlation to temperature changes, and that's what the system is monitoring.busaman said:ive just had a good look at the PDF as i see it there are two easy ways that shouldn't trigger any faults. 1 increase the size of the base of the tank (if there is room) that wont interfere with any sensors just give more volume (there is very little pressure in there anyway).
2 have a reservoir built into the filler neck pipework also shouldn't interfere with the electronics.
im not sure the system will monitor it that closely i will study further, i can confirm the US and UK tanks use the same part number therefore are the same also they cost £383+vat