Jaerl wrote: I did get a W&B with certified scales when we put the tanks back in. I don't have it here but it seems like I was right inside the forward limit. I was actually surprised that it was inside the limit. ....
With some airplanes, I don't believe the empty CG has limits-- it's the loaded CG that matters. With my C150/150, everything loads behind the empty CG so even if that empty CG was a bit forward of the loaded CG parameters it moves aft into the envelope when you put any fuel or people on board. With a 4 place airplane like your C175, it may be that with the empty CG just inside the forward limit, it might be out-of-limits forward with just the pilot & minimal fuel on board. Unfortunately I can't remember any of the W&B info from my 170, so I'm kinda going from memory here.
Like someone pointed out, they seem to fly better with a bit aft CG: slower stall speed, higher cruise speed, etc. Unfortunately, most people seem to want to set them up if possible with the empty CG as far forward as possible, in order to optimize loading capacity. I had the same idea & was considering relocating my battery to the firewall-- however, since the airplane flies so nice with the CG somewhat aft, I decided to leave it behind the baggage area which still leaves me enough aft-loading flexibility to suit me.
Jaerl, where is your empty CG & what are the fore-and-aft CG limits? Keep in mind that the limit(s) may change with the aircraft weight. My forward limit moves aft as the airplane gets heavier: from 31.5" @ 1280# to 33.6" @ 1760. There is also a 1600# limit on "utility" category op's - any heavier & it moves into "normal" category. Different G limits, etc
There's lots of things to consider when dealing with W&B issues.
Eric