SBH2OMan
Well-known member
Well, I'm afraid I have the dreaded fuel smell and gas in the bilge after recently filling the tank past the 1/2 way point.
I've checked the hose connections of the filler and vent hoses and both look fine. I also checked the gasket on the sending unit and it is also fine.
The boat has a 148 gallon tank (according to Parker).
The boat is slipped, and normally we keep it with about 50-75 gallons, because the scuppers and lower unit sit underwater to begin with and any more fuel makes it sit very low.
I added 40 gallons for an island trip on Saturday and after fueling the cabin smelled REALLY badly of raw gas (the filler hose is accessible from under the galley counter, behind the fridge (which is currently removed).
Checking the aft bilge (while underway), I stuck my hand down into the water and could definitely detect fuel in the water.
We made the (I know, dangerous) call to continue on and use up the extra gas, since there is no practical way to remove it otherwise. After returning and sitting in the slip for about 3 hours, the raw gas smell had subsided.
There's definitely a leak somewhere that is happening when the tank is filled more than 1/2 full, whether or not we are underway.
What is the best method to determine where the leak is coming from? I want to be darned sure its a fuel tank problem before I spend $5,000+ to rip up the back deck and replace the tank...
Has anyone used tracer dyes for this sort of thing? (I know they are common for finding AC leaks in cars and commercial HVAC systems).
Thanks
I've checked the hose connections of the filler and vent hoses and both look fine. I also checked the gasket on the sending unit and it is also fine.
The boat has a 148 gallon tank (according to Parker).
The boat is slipped, and normally we keep it with about 50-75 gallons, because the scuppers and lower unit sit underwater to begin with and any more fuel makes it sit very low.
I added 40 gallons for an island trip on Saturday and after fueling the cabin smelled REALLY badly of raw gas (the filler hose is accessible from under the galley counter, behind the fridge (which is currently removed).
Checking the aft bilge (while underway), I stuck my hand down into the water and could definitely detect fuel in the water.
We made the (I know, dangerous) call to continue on and use up the extra gas, since there is no practical way to remove it otherwise. After returning and sitting in the slip for about 3 hours, the raw gas smell had subsided.
There's definitely a leak somewhere that is happening when the tank is filled more than 1/2 full, whether or not we are underway.
What is the best method to determine where the leak is coming from? I want to be darned sure its a fuel tank problem before I spend $5,000+ to rip up the back deck and replace the tank...
Has anyone used tracer dyes for this sort of thing? (I know they are common for finding AC leaks in cars and commercial HVAC systems).
Thanks