First off I'd like to say that after fishing in my good buddys old 20' Grady, I decided I had to have one. These boat hulls are awesome! Our last outing we were fishing in 6-8 footers out in Lake Michigan and we comfortable. So after some long drives looking at about any Grady for sale in my area, I ended up buying an 88 Sailfish with twin yami 200's and a 15hp kicker. I bought it knowing that the fuel tank covers were soft and desperately needed a re-core job, pretty common from what I understand, and I didn't think it was a big deal. After removing the deck, I have discovered that there was a ton of sludge and fuel residue on the tanks, fuel lines are all shot, and there seemed to be some post factory 2"x4" lumber installed over the tanks as a support for the rotting deck panels. I read on here in a few places that a good tank supplier is Florida Marine Tanks (I think) and seen that on both the main and auxilary tanks, it has their label on them. Are these possibly factory tanks? I plan on removing both tanks and checking them for corrosion, leaks, and points of wear. If all is good with the tanks, I will clean and re-install. Should I coat the tanks with anything to retard any further possibility of corrosion, or should I just put them back the way they were? Does anyone ever foam these tanks in? If so, what do you use? And now for my really hard task, After removing the fuel fill hoses from the tanks and looking inside of them, I noticed blister-like bubbles on the inside of the hoses. I know this isn't good and need to replace them but how?!? They are buried under and behind it seems everything. I'm not opposed to put in a new inspection port to help feed them through stringers and bulkheads but I don't want to litter my deck with numerous inspection plates. This seems to be a next to impossible task. Has anyone ever attempted this on their own and can anyone help with tips? Thanks a ton in advance!