GlenEcho
Member
The one thing you don't want to have happen...Hi everyone, I'm relatively new to the forum, but have checked in from time to time. I have a 1997 1700CC; great little boat that I've had a great time with and many fishing stories with as well. Not long ago I found about 5 gallons of gas in the bilge...thought first it was my own fault for over tightening a recently replaced fuel-water separator, then assumed it was leaking from a bad O-ring on a fuel sending unit that I replaced in an attempt to "fix" my broken fuel gauge. After eliminating those, took it down to the shop and pressurized the fuel tank only to find out the worst...there's about a pencil sized hole on the corner of the fuel tank about 1-2 feet from the back of the tank. Read a post about a design flaw where Parker uses foam on the side of the fuel tank to secure it in the deck? The boat is now in the shop...plan is to cut a hole in the deck above the leak and attempt to patch the hole with JB Weld or some sort of patching material, rather than a hideously expensive removal and replacement of the gas tank itself.
Has anyone had a similar situation (patching a leak in a fuel tank)? It is a 15 yr old aluminum tank used almost exclusively in saltwater, any input on the expected life for a stock fuel tank like that? Finally, is there some preventative maintenance steps that I haven't taken into account that maybe I should have to prevent something like this from happening (i.e. removing the access covers periodically to allow the fuel tank to air out)? While the damage is apparently done, any input from your past experiences is appreciated.
Has anyone had a similar situation (patching a leak in a fuel tank)? It is a 15 yr old aluminum tank used almost exclusively in saltwater, any input on the expected life for a stock fuel tank like that? Finally, is there some preventative maintenance steps that I haven't taken into account that maybe I should have to prevent something like this from happening (i.e. removing the access covers periodically to allow the fuel tank to air out)? While the damage is apparently done, any input from your past experiences is appreciated.