Tacoclaw wrote:Nice! You could even use the stock filter nipple and just adjust the thickness of the piece to accommodate.
Nice work, man.

That's exactly what I did. The nipple is stock. The ID of my puck mates with the OD of the nipple in the same manner as the fuel heater to keep the assembly centered. The over-all thickness of this part (including o-rings) is essentially the same as the fuel heater. I made it .015" thicker over-all because the fuel filter o-ring is thicker and compresses more than the thin o-ring on the heater assembly I checked o-ring seat on the nipple to the filter by removing the fuel filter o-ring and putting it together to see how much crush there has to be to make that seat and then checked it again once the o-ring was in place and I gave the filter the customary 3/4 turn after seating. Everything should be sealing up great.
The nice part is when you change your fuel filter, it is loose...so you just inspect/replace the o-ring with the one on the filter you're about to throw away, slap a new filter on, and go. You don't have to wrestle with removing the nipple to check the fuel heater o-ring, nor do you have to source that special o-ring.
I'm not sure there's any real advantage to this approach other than it's one part and gets rid of fuel heater leaks as well as gives you a FP port. An aftermarket bung and aftermarket tapped fuel bolt is just as good and eliminates one o-ring. It's just a different approach...