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#1
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Got Algae in the diesel for my sailboat engine. Coulda been in the Bahamas but I'm not sure. Water separator actually had algae "mud" half filling it. I changed all filters, put in biocide and ran engine for hours. Now, problem seems to have returned. My daughter was sailing her out of Julington Creek and had to get towed in after dark (no wind at all) because engine would start but refused to run under any load. I havent been over to Jacksonville to verify this is the algae problem but considering how bad it was before and I never rinsed the tank......
So, removing the tank is not too hard but what then? What do I use to get the algae off the Aluminum tank walls (only real access is the 2" fuel sender opening). Must be some sort of high pressure spray thing I could spray diesel through against the walls. Maybe empty all the diesel and fill with water clorox solution and spray it with a pressure washer. How would I go about drying out the water from the inside. Can the old diesel be filtered or do I just use it for lighting fires (18 gallons). |
#2
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On 2/28/2016 12:32 AM, Frogwatch wrote:
Got Algae in the diesel for my sailboat engine. Coulda been in the Bahamas but I'm not sure. Water separator actually had algae "mud" half filling it. I changed all filters, put in biocide and ran engine for hours. Now, problem seems to have returned. My daughter was sailing her out of Julington Creek and had to get towed in after dark (no wind at all) because engine would start but refused to run under any load. I havent been over to Jacksonville to verify this is the algae problem but considering how bad it was before and I never rinsed the tank...... So, removing the tank is not too hard but what then? What do I use to get the algae off the Aluminum tank walls (only real access is the 2" fuel sender opening). Must be some sort of high pressure spray thing I could spray diesel through against the walls. Maybe empty all the diesel and fill with water clorox solution and spray it with a pressure washer. How would I go about drying out the water from the inside. Can the old diesel be filtered or do I just use it for lighting fires (18 gallons). Find a company that does mobile fuel polishing. They should use a long pickup tube that reaches the bottom of the tank and can be moved around to it's corners and a return nozzle that the operator can manipulate to spray the walls of the tank under pressure. The biocide you added probably killed most or all of the "critters" but their dead carcases are still going to clog your fuel filters and lines. If you have any water at all in the fuel they are likely to return. |
#3
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On Sat, 27 Feb 2016 21:32:59 -0800 (PST), Frogwatch
wrote: Got Algae in the diesel for my sailboat engine. Coulda been in the Bahamas but I'm not sure. Water separator actually had algae "mud" half filling it. I changed all filters, put in biocide and ran engine for hours. Now, problem seems to have returned. My daughter was sailing her out of Julington Creek and had to get towed in after dark (no wind at all) because engine would start but refused to run under any load. I havent been over to Jacksonville to verify this is the algae problem but considering how bad it was before and I never rinsed the tank...... So, removing the tank is not too hard but what then? What do I use to get the algae off the Aluminum tank walls (only real access is the 2" fuel sender opening). Must be some sort of high pressure spray thing I could spray diesel through against the walls. Maybe empty all the diesel and fill with water clorox solution and spray it with a pressure washer. How would I go about drying out the water from the inside. Can the old diesel be filtered or do I just use it for lighting fires (18 gallons). Put a gallon of E10 or better E85 gas in it. That will suck up all the water and it also has somewhat of a cleaning factor. You still have the problem of getting rid of the gas but it will clean your tank. It is not environmentally sound but good old boys use gas to kill fire ants. |
#4
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Frogwatch wrote:
Got Algae in the diesel for my sailboat engine. Coulda been in the Bahamas but I'm not sure. Water separator actually had algae "mud" half filling it. I changed all filters, put in biocide and ran engine for hours. Now, problem seems to have returned. My daughter was sailing her out of Julington Creek and had to get towed in after dark (no wind at all) because engine would start but refused to run under any load. I havent been over to Jacksonville to verify this is the algae problem but considering how bad it was before and I never rinsed the tank...... So, removing the tank is not too hard but what then? What do I use to get the algae off the Aluminum tank walls (only real access is the 2" fuel sender opening). Must be some sort of high pressure spray thing I could spray diesel through against the walls. Maybe empty all the diesel and fill with water clorox solution and spray it with a pressure washer. How would I go about drying out the water from the inside. Can the old diesel be filtered or do I just use it for lighting fires (18 gallons). Steam? After it's drained, of course. |
#5
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On Mon, 29 Feb 2016 19:51:49 -0500, Alex wrote:
Frogwatch wrote: Got Algae in the diesel for my sailboat engine. Coulda been in the Bahamas but I'm not sure. Water separator actually had algae "mud" half filling it. I changed all filters, put in biocide and ran engine for hours. Now, problem seems to have returned. My daughter was sailing her out of Julington Creek and had to get towed in after dark (no wind at all) because engine would start but refused to run under any load. I havent been over to Jacksonville to verify this is the algae problem but considering how bad it was before and I never rinsed the tank...... So, removing the tank is not too hard but what then? What do I use to get the algae off the Aluminum tank walls (only real access is the 2" fuel sender opening). Must be some sort of high pressure spray thing I could spray diesel through against the walls. Maybe empty all the diesel and fill with water clorox solution and spray it with a pressure washer. How would I go about drying out the water from the inside. Can the old diesel be filtered or do I just use it for lighting fires (18 gallons). Steam? After it's drained, of course. Steam and ammonia is the trick for cleaning gas out of a tank before you weld on it but I am not sure about diesel scum. |
#6
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#7
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