nmflyguy wrote:I can see the argument that if you're down to a handful of gallons of gas, splitting it between two tanks is not as good as having it all in one tank ... but as MTV pointed out, intentionally getting down to just a couple of gallons of gas in the tank is a bad idea anyway. Always land with a minumum of one hour of reserve fuel at your alternate destination - a half hour in each tank is best. If your fuel tank ports are going to uncover in the landing pattern with just a half hour fuel in them, then you need more than an hour's reserve at the end of your flight.
In a perfect and easy world I agree... But.
Lots of reasons why you push up to those fuel reserves, and into them. Headwinds, field going IFR and long hold time, emergency shutting the airport down, etc. Lots of reasons. And what do you do? Declare an emergency because you have an hour's worth of gas left? They frown on that. And there are plenty of places to fly to where you reach a point of no return, and have no legitimate alternative.
Test your fuel flow from all your tanks/selectors early in your flight so you know they work. Then it's manage your fuel best you can. And running a tank dry is a legitimate part of that management. It does you no good to have a collection of one, two, three gallons scattered here and there in different tanks. Empty them out as you near the end of your supply, and save the most for last in one spot.
Gump
Hey stuff happens when you are having fun right 

