Well Charlie, sorry I haven't been on here lately to answer your question about the selector,,,(boat stuff going on ya know) It does have a selector.. I get your drift about knowing you have enough fuel to get where you are going, but I am 72 years old, commercial fished Alaska for 11 years, Washington coast for 1 year(Never again) and I have sport fished Puget Sound for many more. I was only going about 6 miles crabbing and I hold 58 gallons of fuel, plus had only ran the boat a couple hours after fueling up a few days earlier. At first I thought someone had siphoned both tanks while the boat was home. The whole thing boiled down to not knowing the boat and the previous owner hooking the two fuel gauges up to only the port battery and I didn't know that. I unfortunately was running on the starboard battery. When my kicker died running the pots, the first thing I did was switch tanks. Started right back up. I went forward and hit both fuel switches and ""O"" They wouldn't even register. One moved a little, but I think it was static or something. Tapped the aluminum tanks and they sure sounded empty. Of course they would a this point... After finally getting fuel and everything straightened out, I tore into the entire fuel system when I got the dory home, come to fine out, the only check valves was the primer bulbs and evidently the one on the main wasn't seating properly allowing it to pull the fuel from the main line and the kicker quitting. It must have reseated itself after it started back up because it ran all the way to Skyline to fuel up. Then like I stated it only took very little fuel. I found then when the gauges still read ""O"" that they were hooked to only one battery. I knew they worked right after I got the boat. That's when I switched to both batteries, and walaa they were full again...It was just one of those days on the water when nothing went right along with the fact I wasn't out of fuel after all. And it will have two new check valves installed before the next trip. The port sender wasn't working right either, so that is why it got changed. I don't try and second guess anything on a boat, if something is not right,,it gets fixed. I shouldn't even say this because the next time out I might have to be towed, but with literally thousands of hours on the water, I have yet to have ever had to be towed or run out of fuel. Guess I'm just getting to the point I don't like learning new boats anymore. So this little dory might be around for some time ..Maybe as long as I am..Take care back there..