- Joined
- Feb 11, 2020
- Messages
- 456
- Reaction score
- 86
- Points
- 28
- Location
- Samish Island, WA
- Model
- Sailfish
Hi All,
The time has to come to pull the fuel tanks out of my 272. I want to clean off any corrosion, flush the insides, and repaint them. I also want to look at the stringers and clean everything up. There simply wasn’t time to go this deep last year when we bought it but this year it’s going to get done.
Progress so far is disconnecting all of the hoses, removal of the auxiliary tank and all of the lumber and wedges that keep them in place. Horoscope (LOL, I’m leaving this typo) shows clean nice-looking metal inside the aux tank, but there was definitely some nasty fuel that came out. Interesting because everything I pumped out through the pick up system was clean. My Racors showed no phase separation, no debris. The last gallon or so I sucked out through the sender port was much nastier though. Kind of black looking. Rubber?
It was all going relatively smoothly yesterday. The existing 2 inch fuel line is rock hard and it’s going to be a lot harder to get out than I think the new pieces will be to get in. Definitely was a struggle to get them off of the fuel fill fittings on the gunwale. I have electrical pulling strap running through those paths right now, but is that how this is normally done? It’s sort of seems like it wouldn’t be necessary but I wanted to be on the safe side.
So anyway we were doing great until we discovered that the aluminum fill hose fitting on the top of the big front tank will prevent it from sliding out from under the helm structure. There is a wave shaped fiberglass reinforcement running across that that would have to be zipped out to get the fuel fitting through. Seems strange so I’m gonna take a bunch of pictures and post them here this morning.
So anyone have knowledge or memory of this battle? I’m wondering if that fiberglass might’ve been added afterwards? I can’t imagine how this front tank will go in and out with it in place. Unless there’s a chamfer on the front tank bottom allowing it to tip which doesn’t seem likely (edit - there isn't). Haven’t seen that far in yet. It’s pretty heavy, so I’m going to suck the last of the remnant fuel out of this one too. Be interesting to see what kind of garbage I find.
Yesterday I found a standard screwdriver stuck right at the bottom of the fill hose fitting on the aux tank. Managed to wrestle the hose off and there it was. Green handled flat blade from quite a while back. Little rusty too. I wondered why aux needed to be filled more slowly. Now I know.
So how the heck did they get that tank in there?
Thank you for your insights.
This is the piece I'm describing viewed from the outside. They class clears the tank by ~5/8"
This is the glass reinforcement viewed from inside. Camera is sitting on the tank surface.
At the end where the glass reinforcement stops. I need just about this much clearance to get the tank out.
Can't ta
You can't tell in the photo but there is just enough clearance for that fitting to slide under the ply. There wasn't with the hose on it.
I realize this may be hard to picture from what I posted, so here's where we are.
The time has to come to pull the fuel tanks out of my 272. I want to clean off any corrosion, flush the insides, and repaint them. I also want to look at the stringers and clean everything up. There simply wasn’t time to go this deep last year when we bought it but this year it’s going to get done.
Progress so far is disconnecting all of the hoses, removal of the auxiliary tank and all of the lumber and wedges that keep them in place. Horoscope (LOL, I’m leaving this typo) shows clean nice-looking metal inside the aux tank, but there was definitely some nasty fuel that came out. Interesting because everything I pumped out through the pick up system was clean. My Racors showed no phase separation, no debris. The last gallon or so I sucked out through the sender port was much nastier though. Kind of black looking. Rubber?
It was all going relatively smoothly yesterday. The existing 2 inch fuel line is rock hard and it’s going to be a lot harder to get out than I think the new pieces will be to get in. Definitely was a struggle to get them off of the fuel fill fittings on the gunwale. I have electrical pulling strap running through those paths right now, but is that how this is normally done? It’s sort of seems like it wouldn’t be necessary but I wanted to be on the safe side.
So anyway we were doing great until we discovered that the aluminum fill hose fitting on the top of the big front tank will prevent it from sliding out from under the helm structure. There is a wave shaped fiberglass reinforcement running across that that would have to be zipped out to get the fuel fitting through. Seems strange so I’m gonna take a bunch of pictures and post them here this morning.
So anyone have knowledge or memory of this battle? I’m wondering if that fiberglass might’ve been added afterwards? I can’t imagine how this front tank will go in and out with it in place. Unless there’s a chamfer on the front tank bottom allowing it to tip which doesn’t seem likely (edit - there isn't). Haven’t seen that far in yet. It’s pretty heavy, so I’m going to suck the last of the remnant fuel out of this one too. Be interesting to see what kind of garbage I find.
Yesterday I found a standard screwdriver stuck right at the bottom of the fill hose fitting on the aux tank. Managed to wrestle the hose off and there it was. Green handled flat blade from quite a while back. Little rusty too. I wondered why aux needed to be filled more slowly. Now I know.
So how the heck did they get that tank in there?
Thank you for your insights.
This is the piece I'm describing viewed from the outside. They class clears the tank by ~5/8"
This is the glass reinforcement viewed from inside. Camera is sitting on the tank surface.
At the end where the glass reinforcement stops. I need just about this much clearance to get the tank out.
Can't ta
You can't tell in the photo but there is just enough clearance for that fitting to slide under the ply. There wasn't with the hose on it.
I realize this may be hard to picture from what I posted, so here's where we are.
Last edited: