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Drifter[_2_] October 25th 11 02:31 PM

Getting water out of gas tank?
 
On 10/25/2011 7:42 AM, Tim wrote:
On Oct 25, 6:39 am, wrote:
On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:









On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, -...@++.-- wrote:


Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans. To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/- gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?


Others here have given you good advice:


1. Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).


2. Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.


Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?


Sure! most of the older farm tractors had them, but they screwed into
the base of the tank. I have seen some mountable in-line glass bowl
units, though


Should have been more specific and said boat inboard gas engine.

Wayne.B October 25th 11 09:49 PM

Getting water out of gas tank?
 
On Tue, 25 Oct 2011 09:31:19 -0400, Drifter wrote:

On 10/25/2011 7:42 AM, Tim wrote:
On Oct 25, 6:39 am, wrote:
On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:









On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, -...@++.-- wrote:

Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans. To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/- gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?

Others here have given you good advice:

1. Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).

2. Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.

Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?


Sure! most of the older farm tractors had them, but they screwed into
the base of the tank. I have seen some mountable in-line glass bowl
units, though


Should have been more specific and said boat inboard gas engine.


===

As I understand it, boats with enclosed bilges, which includes
virtually all inboard engines, are not allowed to use glass or plastic
filter bowls, only metal. That said, my Racor 1000s on the trawler
have plastic bowls but that's a diesel boat. Some Racor 1000s are
offered with a metal shield around the bowl, not sure about their
smaller filters.

Bruce[_3_] October 26th 11 02:37 AM

Getting water out of gas tank?
 
On Tue, 25 Oct 2011 07:39:48 -0400, Drifter wrote:

On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, --@++.-- wrote:

Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans. To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/- gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?


Others here have given you good advice:

1. Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).

2. Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.


Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?


I haven't seen one and all the gasoline engine cars I've seen use the
little inline filters. Whether the diesel water catchers would work
would, I believe, depend on whether the float floats in gasoline or
not.
--

Cheers,

Bruce

Bruce[_3_] October 26th 11 02:40 AM

Getting water out of gas tank?
 
On Tue, 25 Oct 2011 16:49:06 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote:

On Tue, 25 Oct 2011 09:31:19 -0400, Drifter wrote:

On 10/25/2011 7:42 AM, Tim wrote:
On Oct 25, 6:39 am, wrote:
On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:









On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, -...@++.-- wrote:

Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans. To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/- gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?

Others here have given you good advice:

1. Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).

2. Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.

Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?

Sure! most of the older farm tractors had them, but they screwed into
the base of the tank. I have seen some mountable in-line glass bowl
units, though


Should have been more specific and said boat inboard gas engine.


===

As I understand it, boats with enclosed bilges, which includes
virtually all inboard engines, are not allowed to use glass or plastic
filter bowls, only metal. That said, my Racor 1000s on the trawler
have plastic bowls but that's a diesel boat. Some Racor 1000s are
offered with a metal shield around the bowl, not sure about their
smaller filters.


Aren't the Racors legal if they have that catch bowl installed on
them? I think I remember seeing them sold as an add-on from Racor.

--

Cheers,

Bruce

Boats November 7th 11 06:20 PM

I would drain the tank completely to be sure, it would be worth the extra efforts.





Quote:

Originally Posted by Tim (Post 899270)
On Oct 25, 6:39*am, Drifter wrote:
On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:









On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, -...@++.-- wrote:


Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans. To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/- gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?


Others here have given you good advice:


1. *Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).


2. *Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. * It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. * The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.


Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?


Sure! most of the older farm tractors had them, but they screwed into
the base of the tank. I have seen some mountable in-line glass bowl
units, though


Bruce[_3_] November 8th 11 01:13 AM

Getting water out of gas tank?
 
On Mon, 7 Nov 2011 18:20:46 +0000, Boats
wrote:


I would drain the tank completely to be sure, it would be worth the
extra efforts.

Water being heavier then gasoline will be in the bottom of the tank.
The easiest method to remove it is the one you describe If you are
still worried add some alcohol to the gas tank. It will mix with the
water to make a combustible mixture that will burn in your engine with
no problems. Google "dry gas".



Tim;899270 Wrote:
On Oct 25, 6:39*am, Drifter wrote:-
On 10/24/2011 11:29 PM, Wayne.B wrote:








-
On Mon, 24 Oct 2011 12:18:31 -0700, -...@++.-- wrote:-
--
Recently my boat got pounded pretty good from behind by a bunch of
wind produced
waves. After that it didn't want to run because water got in the
breather for
the gas tank. I ran a line from a can of good gas and ran the engine
and it
cleared up and began running normally again. I got an electric fuel
pump and
attached it to the tank's fuel line and pumped out into portable cans.
To me, at
first it appeared to pump clean water, then it looked milky for a
while, then it
looked like clean gas. I pumped about 2 more gallons out of the 14+/-
gallon
tank after it began looking like good gas, and it still looked good so
I stopped
pumping. Is it safe to think the remaining gas is okay?--
-
Others here have given you good advice:-
-
1. *Best to empty and discard as much of the tank as possible (most
of
the water will be on the bottom and will slosh around when under way
and get remixed with fuel).-
-
2. *Racor makes a really excellent bulkhead mounted fuel filter. * It
is more expensive than the Sierra but worth it in my opinion. * The
Racor has a drain tap on the bottom so you can see if water is
accumulating in the filter bowl and get rid rid of it.-

Do they make glass bowl filters for inboard gas engines?-

Sure! most of the older farm tractors had them, but they screwed into
the base of the tank. I have seen some mountable in-line glass bowl
units, though

--

Cheers,

Bruce


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