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Best practice for DIY tank repair in 4x4ing is to flush the tank
several times then do any welding with the tank full of water, as in right to the top of the filler and vent, zero air inside, period. Then weld. Yes, I have done this to my Toyota 4x4 while on a trail. Insert disclaimer here... Gas is explosive in confined areas and the water will displace the oxygen preventing an explosion. If you can do likewise with the bilge, flushing and filling, you should be relatively safe. I would also use a reciprocating saw or some form of blade cutting that is less likely to cause sparks as opposed to a die grinder or torch. As for responsibility, you purchased a working vessel, fit and ready for service. The onus is on the supplier to stand behind workmanship; unless the boat was in some form of distress at some point I can see no reason for a fuel leak, ergo workmanship. On Wed, 07 Apr 2004 00:41:08 GMT, "habbi" wrote: The aluminum tank has aluminum pipes welded to it which go toward the side of the hull and then 90 up 1' above the deck.(welded through deck.) Then the rubber filler, vent and feed start. I plugged the filler and vent and then pressurized the feed with 5psi. The air is hissing out of the tank but I can't see where. Bottom line is the deck has to be cut open but I want the vapours gone before attempting this. I have heard of people rinsing out metal gas tanks from cars with water and then trying to weld them and they still blew up. I guess what I am essentially dealing with is a very very large empty gasoline tank which has a smaller 100 gallon gasoline tank inside it. What should expect from the builder which is in a different province and had the boat shipped here. Should this type of problem be their responsibility or mine? Again the boat is 1 year old. "Bowgus" wrote in message t.cable.rogers.com... Or maybe the problem is the filler tube (maybe torn) or it's connection to the tank (loose clamp)? And might I suggest you remove ALL the fuel from the boat (tank, bilge) before doing any work ... I assume by work you mean cutting open the deck ... and let it air out for a coupla days before doing any work. habbi wrote in message ... I have a 31 aluminum work boat with an under deck fuel tank which must be leaking. The aluminum deck is welded in place. The tank is a 100 gallon aluminum tank. The boat is only 1 year old. I removed the drain plug from the back of the boat and about 2 gaollons of gas came out, this leads me to believe that the crack must be on the top of the tank because the tank is almost full and this is the only time I ever opened the drain plug. Before I do any work I want to make sure I don't have an explosion. If I fill the bilge area with dishsoap and water and then drain it will this remove all dangerous vapours? Any other ideas? |