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Yet another Racor thread

bsangs

E35-3 - New Jersey
This is what I do. I haven't visited a fuel dock since the day I first took possession of my boat 5 years ago. My yellow diesel jug lets in enough light that I can see exactly what crap may have been in the fuel. I use a "rattle siphon" to go from jug to tank. I fill my jug at a roadside gas station, so there is no red dye in it: that makes it easy to see any contaminants in the fuel filter bowl.
We must be following the same plan, though I bring the jug down below and pour it directly into the tank, as my marina frowns on filling up/topping off in your slip. And the roadside diesel - while not exactly cheap anymore - always costs quite less than marina diesel.
 

HerbertFriedman

Sustaining Member
We must be following the same plan, though I bring the jug down below and pour it directly into the tank, as my marina frowns on filling up/topping off in your slip. And the roadside diesel - while not exactly cheap anymore - always costs quite less than marina diesel.
where in the tank do you pour the diesel? Do you remove the "full/empty" sight gauge" or other port?
 

peaman

Contributing Partner
my marina frowns on filling up/topping off in your slip.
Yeah, I would hesitate in hoisting a five gallon jug in the slip in broad daylight. The rattle siphon is very easy, discreet and efficient. By having a towel handy when removing the siphon from either tank or jug, it is easy to do so without a single drop of fuel on boat or water. Of course, you wouldn't want to "top off" if there is the least chance of over-filling, but if the jug is mostly lower than the fuel fill opening during transfer operations, it will stop when levels match inside and outside. If I needed 100% tank capacity before a long passage, I would probably stop at a fuel dock, or carry a full fuel jug for transfer later.
 

Christian Williams

E381 - Los Angeles
Senior Moderator
Blogs Author
Anything is better than filling a fuel tank inside the cabin, which is unseamanlike and a pain in the butt. Rattle siphon to fuel fill, as recommended above. Criminal behavior will be exposed to view for only 10 minutes.
 

bsangs

E35-3 - New Jersey
Yeah, I would hesitate in hoisting a five gallon jug in the slip in broad daylight. The rattle siphon is very easy, discreet and efficient. By having a towel handy when removing the siphon from either tank or jug, it is easy to do so without a single drop of fuel on boat or water. Of course, you wouldn't want to "top off" if there is the least chance of over-filling, but if the jug is mostly lower than the fuel fill opening during transfer operations, it will stop when levels match inside and outside. If I needed 100% tank capacity before a long passage, I would probably stop at a fuel dock, or carry a full fuel jug for transfer later.
I actually bought one a few years back based on a similar discussion here, but have never used it. Five years doing it this way, never a spilled drop (knock wood), easy to see how the diesel looks, and its level compared to my sight gauge - since I don't have a working fuel gauge on the engine panel. Just takes two minutes to remove the Q berth cushions and lay down a towel. Plus I try to keep her full or close to full, and never really need more than five gallons, so it's not like I'm lugging 20 gallons up and down. I tend to stick with what works, even at the risk of being unseamanlike. Sorry Christian, guess I'm guilty as charged in this arena. I promise it won't lead to sailing with the fenders deployed though. :)
 
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