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Fuel tank replacement cost?

Prairie Schooner

Jeff & Donna, E35-3 purchased 7/21
Many thanks, all! It's depressing to have this happen right as I have time to sail... really nice to have people who can help me sort it out efficiently -- deeply appreciated.

- Sounds like everyone's going with 1/8"... anyone sizing up to 3/16", I'd be interested to hear about it. Loren: if you did it again, would you go up from 1/8" ?

- Vanilladuck: Did Coastline put in the brass fittings and label everything (in your image above), or did they provide the tank and you had to get all the fittings? Trying to figure out if this will be plug-and-play.

- Prairie Schooner: what diameter are your inspection ports? Want to size up based on your comment. I see VanillaDuck has 8 or 10" ones.

I'll see if I can find someone local, but suspect I'll end up driving my old tank to someone to copy. And Coastline/Bellingham is (much) farther than Berry/Costa Mesa... though I'll definitely talk with both.

Yes, a pretty large leak... which was very sudden: Bilge dry in the AM, then after a 3-hr, not-too-boisterous sail suddenly a bunch of diesel. Which did not look pink in the bilge, only after getting some on a paper towel; must have to do with the light transiting twice on reflection from the bilge (or, I guess, maybe that the bottom of my bilge is not and never will get as clean and white as one of the image Christian posted of his somewhere.)

The fabricator installed prefab inspection ports in our tank. I'd have to be at the boat to measure, but going from my hand, I'd say no bigger than 5"- 6". There's not room to get an arm in and see what I'm groping for. Pic of our completed new tank before installation.
post #52 - https://ericsonyachts.org/ie/threads/e35-3-replacing-fuel-tank.17731/post-177000
8" - 10" would be nice

Discussions of inspection ports from a few years back, if you haven't seen them:
- https://ericsonyachts.org/ie/threads/inspection-ports-for-fuel-tanks.18789/
- https://ericsonyachts.org/ie/threads/fuel-tank-inspection-port-design-and-installation.13949/


Some links I'd catalogued on epoxy repair:
post #8 - https://ericsonyachts.org/ie/threads/e35-3-replacing-fuel-tank.17731/post-142335
- https://www.epoxyworks.com/index.php/category/boat-repair/aluminum-boat-repair/
- https://www.epoxyworks.com/index.php/aluminum-adhesion/#more-2248
- https://www.epoxyworks.com/index.php/fix-leaking-rivets-in-aluminum-boats-with-gflex-650/

It seems to me there is an even more extensive thread with discussion of epoxy tank repair, but I can't put my fingers on it at the moment.
 

vanilladuck

E32-3 / San Francisco
Blogs Author
- Vanilladuck: Did Coastline put in the brass fittings and label everything (in your image above), or did they provide the tank and you had to get all the fittings? Trying to figure out if this will be plug-and-play.

The fittings were supplied, but I changed out the NPT-hose barbs to fit Rumour's fuel system hoses. You might be able to ask for specific sizes. I put the labels on at install time

@N.A. - I'm really sorry to hear your tank is leaking. It's a bummer. Many owners have been discovering things like this as our boats age. Others have suggested that ~40+ years brings up a number of "half life" projects. I've definitely been finding a lot of that myself ;)
 
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N.A.

E34 / SF Bay
Thanks, @vanilladuck - I feel for you as well -- I've seen your posts re: the keel.

This one is stinging particularly because it has sunk my plans for the LongPac this summer. I am starting to wonder if the way one prepares for Hawaii is to end up fixing literally every single system on the boat... looking at what Christian has done, it seems like that might actually be the (inadvertent) case. Anyway, at least the tank didn't let go while offshore.

@Marlin Prowell provided some nice information (by email; thanks again Marlin!); relevant bits not posted above include:

* Atlantic Coastal Welding did the job quite inexpensively. I'll probably touch base with them. They claim quick turn-around.

* They epoxy-coated the _outside_ of the tank... I had not heard of this. Unsure what the point it, unless it relates to @Loren Beach 's comment about a pinhole leak due to trapped water on the outside of the tank. Seems like maybe a good idea anyway (? I'll ask other firms too.)

* They modified the tabs on the tank into right-angle flanges, welded to the vertical sides of the tank, then bending over to meet the bolt-pattern on the hull liner. This seems like it might be a good bit more mechanically robust to up/down loads than the flat, and not that thick, tabs on my current tank. I'll ask a MechE friend, but it seems like maybe this is actually the correct way to do a tank mount.

* They added a "Drain Coupling"... which seemed to be in addition to the 4 hoses I know of (fill/vent/fuel/return). Does anyone know more about this / is some additional coupling on the bottom of the tank normal?
 

Filkee

Sustaining Member
I have a 32-3. Pulled it out and took it to a local body shop. They cut a hole in tua nd said the rest of the tank was going to outlive me. Welded a new piece in and sent me on my way for $150. So begins the death watch.
 

Loren Beach

O34 - Portland, OR
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
* They epoxy-coated the _outside_ of the tank... I had not heard of this. Unsure what the point it, unless it relates to @Loren Beach 's comment about a pinhole leak due to trapped water on the outside of the tank. Seems like maybe a good idea anyway (? I'll ask other firms too.)
I must have mis-stated it. The moisture was on the inside, in one little teeny place.
 

Loren Beach

O34 - Portland, OR
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
* They added a "Drain Coupling"... which seemed to be in addition to the 4 hoses I know of (fill/vent/fuel/return). Does anyone know more about this / is some additional coupling on the bottom of the tank normal?
I have never heard of such a thing. Any pix to share?
 

frick

Sustaining Member
I took my old E29 15 Gallon tank toa local shop on Long Island. They replicated the tank perfectly. This was 20 years ago, but it was a sub 300 dollar fix. It was cheaper than buys a plastic tank from West Marine which would have required all new hoses as the old ones would not match up.

Also, When I pulled in the A4 in 2002, I had all the hoses replaced for Diesel. It just made sense to have the duplicate tank made.
https://www.alloymetalworks.com/contact-us These are the guys I used
 

N.A.

E34 / SF Bay
@Filkee , @frick -- Thanks! I'm going to look locally, just since shipping to/from will be a ton (one shop estimated it might be $400 one-way, but suggested I talk with UPS. They seemed to think the issue with UPS vs a freight company was risk of damage to the tank, presumably due to lighter packaging/different shipping strategy at UPS for something of this size and easy-dentability.)

Loren: Not my tank; all the receipt they sent me says is "Drain coupling". Same receipt lists 4 other connections, hence my question about what this is.

@Christian Williams -- in some thread related to all this, you say "get the fuel out of the bilge." Obviously this is a good idea (I naturally pumped the bilge dry right after the leak), but is it OK to leave the film of diesel in there for a few weeks? I have no easy way to clean the bilge further as-is, since I'm in my marina (with no engine, since I pumped all the fuel out of the tank) and cannot take the risk of any overboard discharge. The main issue is the parts I cannot reach by hand -- I already simple-greened everything I can reach.

I'll find a way to do more if it will do damage to the fiberglass to leave the film of diesel in there, though -- do you (or does anyone) know if that's a real risk / I need to do a detergent-clean ASAP? (PS: none on shaft coupling hose, thank god.)
 

Christian Williams

E381 - Los Angeles
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
I think you just get out what you can see or reach, and shrug. Eventually you can flood the bidge and TAFG with detergent, but in my opinion no rush. Long as you can;t smell it, or it creates no other offense to life aboard.
 

Dave G.

1984 E30+ (SOLD)
They epoxy-coated the _outside_ of the tank..
The only epoxy repair that I know will work is applied to inside of the tank by coating the area that was corroded by sludge build up. West Systems was very helpful in my fuel tank repair and all good some 4+ years later.
 
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