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Who is a good company to make a new fuel tank for my E41 in the PNW?

Mike Brockman

Ericson 41
Finally getting to replacing my fuel tank on my E41. It's not leaking but very rusty.
Hoping someone has had a good experience in Oregon or Washington.
 

Loren Beach

O34 - Portland, OR
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
I also have a blog entry here and some fuel tank related entries in threads. I am still happy with the tank they built for me many years ago.
To "reiterate again" the finished tank will only be as good as your drawing. (!) I spent serious some time making a plywood mockup, and did get the details about 98% right.

My tank replacement adventure, here: https://ericsonyachts.org/ie/threads/diesel-tank-replacement.6303/
 

Beloh

Junior Member
Mine was made and installed by Galmukoff Marine in Port Hadlock. That was in 2015, before I bought the boat but the tank is solid and well built. I just wish there was an inspection/cleanout port, I'll add one eventually.

 

toddster

Curator of Broken Parts
Blogs Author
Well, this thread is a little late for me. I ordered one a couple of weeks ago, auxiliary tank for the J boat, but took a slightly different approach. Another owner who had the factory auxiliary tank option (mine didn't) sent me a photo of the tank with the builder's plate. I tracked down the OEM manufacturer: "I want one of those!" They still had the drawings on file from 1995. The drawback is they are in North Carolina, and shipping will be about 25% of the total cost. Excluding hoses, valves, and such, which are likely to add a similar amount.

The E29 came to me with just an off-the-shelf plastic Moeller tank on a little plywood platform. Apparently giving up some volume in exchange for ease of installation.
 

tenders

Innocent Bystander
There are fuel and water tank manufacturers all over the place - if you know what you want, ask around and I’m sure you’ll be referred to a local shop who fabricate one-off tanks of all types and sizes all day long. Only when somebody has something off-the-shelf does paying for shipping empty space make sense!

If it’s rusty, and it’s not leaking, it is FAR better to replace it now while you’re in control of the system than later, when you won’t be. I’ve done this twice: once when I bought the boat, and the surveyor found the leak, and the seller had to jump through hoops to get a new tank in place quickly. The second time was 20 years later when I noticed rust and what may - or may not - have been the very beginnings of a leak while the boat was on the hard.

I replaced my fuel tank for the second and final time in my 34-year history owning the boat in, I think, 2011 with a stainless tank that was fabricated locally based on a simple drawing I made of the installed mild steel tank. It was ridiculously expensive, yes, but there was no shipping cost and I will never wonder about the tank’s integrity again.

I bought a polyethylene Moeller tank for my head discharge several years ago because one of their standard sizes fit miraculously, perfectly under my V-berth. The shipping was a bit steep considering the price of the tank but they were able to put the intake and discharge holes exactly where I wanted them, and that was all the customization necessary. The entire transaction took place in my living room after I had the measurements of my V-berth.
 

frick

Sustaining Member
I took my e29 leaking tank to a local shop on long island ny. They reproduced the tank more cheaply than a west marine poly tank. Plus, every hose matched up to the new tank.
 
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