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- Feb 5, 2021
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Man if you have any type other than the "cap" type, you may want to replace them with the cap type. Mine is a '19 and they came on it.
They naturally shed water and have a raised lip that help prevent water intrusion. I also lifeseal mine on upon closure. Just as easy to remove and the lifeseal pretty much peels off in one piece. These guys:
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Not really. These have a "roof" over the hole, vs a gap that must rely on an "O" ring. That's not a small distinction. In a similar fashion, our battery hatches rely on a seal as well, vs a roof design and mine ALWAYS leaks. It just drips on the batteries vs foam.Those are the same ones I had on my 2012 2320. If you keep sealing them you may not have an issue. The o rings certainly do fail over time and the plates get deformed from being stepped on. Those pie plates are the Achilles heal of that coffin box. The screw down ones I installed are more flush to the deck and the plate is rigid. Think I might put down a bead of silicone or life seal as well though just for added protection. So far they have been water tight
Not really. These have a "roof" over the hole, vs a gap that must rely on an "O" ring. That's not a small distinction. In a similar fashion, our battery hatches rely on a seal as well, vs a roof design and mine ALWAYS leaks. It just drips on the batteries vs foam.
Wait, you said "had." Do you no longer have the boat, or those plates?
So you are saying the plate in post 25 is this part number? It's a different design. That top plate goes down inside the base. The plates they used on mine in post 24 have an extended lip the covers the entire base. I think it may be better, because on the tank I can access, (combined with the lifeseal) I have never found any water on the tank that originated from above. Thank God that rear hatch is not over the tank. It leaks like crazy, because it relies solely on a seal, vs an overhanging cap and seal.Interesting because mine are the exact same part/model number. Are you referring to the the notch that extends further down where the gap is? Curious if they improved the hatch design
So you are saying the plate in post 25 is this part number? It's a different design. That top plate goes down inside the base. The plates they used on mine in post 24 have an extended lip the covers the entire base. I think it may be better, because on the tank I can access, (combined with the lifeseal) I have never found any water on the tank that originated from above. Thank God that rear hatch is not over the tank. It leaks like crazy, because it relies solely on a seal, vs an overhanging cap and seal.
Sorry man, beat that horse to death
Ya according to your pic it’s the same part/model # M-6AP from Innovative product solutions.there does appear to be some changes in design from you pic. Mine also also has the notch that extends down at the gapSo you are saying the plate in post 25 is this part number? It's a different design. That top plate goes down inside the base. The plates they used on mine in post 24 have an extended lip the covers the entire base. I think it may be better, because on the tank I can access, (combined with the lifeseal) I have never found any water on the tank that originated from above. Thank God that rear hatch is not over the tank. It leaks like crazy, because it relies solely on a seal, vs an overhanging cap and seal.
Sorry man, beat that horse to death.
Now I guess another question is how necessary it might be as my boat is kept under a cover and in a garage?
Great info! My Parker has the battery shelf above the tube that runs across the bottom of the boat. Do you think I need to drill holes underneath the battery shelf?My Wet Foam Fix
I had a bait tank drain hose split on my 2520xl resulting in gallons of salt water in the “fuel bay” (below deck area between bulkheads and gunwales where fuel tank lives).
I used the same drying techniques as Blueghost93 and more. I added two scuppers as limber holes at the base of the aft bulkhead; one on each side of the factory PVC drain. I used the one inch brass tube type that would normally b place on a transom. After using a hole saw to penetrate the fuel bay’s aft bulkhead I dug out foam to create a void where water could drain from the fuel bay foam and thru the holes I drilled.
Then:
- With the bow raised, so gravity would help,
- Fans added to 2 inspection ports on deck (which added air pressure to help the water move down & migrate aft).
- Wet-vac added to apply suction to the newly drilled drain holes.
After about 2 months of this the water removal slowly dissipated after removing approximately 5+ gallons.
Pictures:
- Brass scuppers
- Holes drilled from aft side of aft bulkhead
- A picture I copied from a “tank replacement post” where someone else added similar drains using PVC. I think PVC is a better way to go.
IMy boat is a 2005 so I’m just trying to buy time before replacing the tank.
Man, I am starting to think the current caps will fit your already installed bases. If your Parker dealer is close, I might tow it by there and ask if you could try one off a boat on the lot...then order two. Plus you could see how the new ones are made while your there. That's always fun.Ya according to your pic it’s the same part/model # M-6AP from Innovative product solutions.there does appear to be some changes in design from you pic. Mine also also has the notch that extends down at the gap
So the question becomes; where is the water coming from that at is accumulating in the fuel tank bay. You now better understand why I created drain tubes on each side of the PVC as it exits the aft bulkhead of the fuel bay (see picture in my last post).Update. I did some research and it seems as though the PVC pipe from the anchor locker is the lowest point on the boat under the fuel tank. So after drilling an access hole I popped a 3/8” hole into the wall separating the gas tank from the bilge and boom water gushing. Hopefully this fully drains the fuel tank foam and the 90 degree weather will evaporate the rest if I’m lucky
The water is from when the bilge filled with rain water months ago and I had all the pumps and hoses out and drain plug in We had 3 days of crazy rain.So the question becomes; where is the water coming from that at is accumulating in the fuel tank bay. You now better understand why I created drain tubes on each side of the PVC as it exits the aft bulkhead of the fuel bay (see picture in my last post).
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