I burn 130-150g on a typical fishing trip offshore. I feel that leaving the dock at full fuel provides me the option to go a bit further and provides me a solid safety margin. When I visit the NE Canyons I am full fuel plus 120g gas bladder. Knowing my actual useable fuel is most important on such a long trip where I burn minimum 250g. However, I agree with your point and often run less than full when staying close to home.If you are not going to use 200 gallons or so on a trip, why fill the tank? As mentioned your MPG will suffer due to the added weight and you won't have to fight that last 10 gallons.
As an aside, I have read several messages from folks with later model year boats that have the mandatory vapor recovery canister for the fuel tank. They seem to frequently have issues gassing up due to the fill nozzle constantly tripping.
Here is an interesting view on filling the tank or not.My reason for full(er) tank is less condensate water risk and if u need it it's there. But yes drawback is u do haul some extra weight. I also keep water tank and diesel tank full plus anchor and cleaning supplies etc.etc that all are seldom needed under way so in the long run burning a little more fuel is not that big a deal.
AND yes the new reg fuel fill vent is a real p i a . And no way to reach the Canister either.
H
I actually siphon the bladder into the main tank via the deck fill tube. I did consider direct connection and fuel pump. The direct connection would require modifications to the fuel supply lines which would not be straight forward given the routing of the lines. Not to mention dealing with gas lines and the related safety concerns - I am handy, but don't consider this something I should tackle. On the pump side, you can purchase a pump that transfers ~70g/hr. I can transfer ~60g/hr via siphon (1/2" hose). The pump also requires it to be plugged in and will hold some amount of residual gas once used. The additional complexity of the pump and associated safety risks doesn't buy me a much quicker fill time. I only visit the canyons 2-3x per year, so it makes more sense to keep the transfer of fuel as simple as possible in my opinion - so I just siphon it.How do you use the bladder? DO you have a transfer pump or do you have a direct connection/valve to fuel supply line?
h
My marina only sells non-ethanol fuel - no E10. So that is a plus. As far as water in fuel I have inline fuel/water separators one for each engine. In theory, no water should find its way to the engine. Filters are replaced annually and inspected for water. If water found, then efforts made to determine where water is entering tank. Right or wrong, I was told by the dealer to try to keep the tank full to minimize the occurrence of condensation. I am in Cape Cod and we have fairly large temp/humidity swings at times. I've never had any issues with water in the fuel.. knocking on wood.Here is an interesting view on filling the tank or not.
The argument is that a full tank will be subject to less condensation and I suppose that is true. How much condensation is a tough question to answer. The physics is complicated. Condensation will only occur during cycles of temperature so if you store or dock your boat where the temp and humidity doesn't change much ( like at night), the amount of condensation will be less.
I am assuming that ethanol gas is used. E10 will absorb about 1/2% water by volume. In a 200 gallon tank, that is 1 gallon of water. After that amount, water will fall to the bottom of the tank.
The water absorbed will be burn off in the motors. It is logical to assume that if a tank goes through multiple cycles of condensation, eventually water will start to buildup in the bottom of the tank. If enough builds up, you will suck more and more water into the motors and they don't run very well on water alone (wouldn't that be nice if they did).
So the argument is that if you are going to take multiple short trips, you should add only as much gas as you will need and do that before the trip. That way ,hopefully, you add fresh gas that can absorb new moisture.
I boat in the north east and we usually do not have the same temp extremes as the south nor the same constant high humidity and I can honestly say that in all my years of boating and my experience at my club, 90$ or more of water in the gas problems were due to water intrusion or a load of bad gas and not condensation.
There are issues with corrosion due to water in gas and those are typically worse with alcohol blends but that is another story.
If your pickup is sucking water from the bottom of the tank, your water separator will fill with water. The water has to go somewhere.My marina only sells non-ethanol fuel - no E10. So that is a plus. As far as water in fuel I have inline fuel/water separators one for each engine. In theory, no water should find its way to the engine. Filters are replaced annually and inspected for water. If water found, then efforts made to determine where water is entering tank. Right or wrong, I was told by the dealer to try to keep the tank full to minimize the occurrence of condensation. I am in Cape Cod and we have fairly large temp/humidity swings at times. I've never had any issues with water in the fuel.. knocking on wood.
I initially had a 1/2" hose out of bladder to a 3/8" primer bulb & hose. I've upgraded to a 5/8" primer bulb and hose, but still come out of bladder via 1/2" hose. I place the bladder (120g, 48"x48"x12") mid-cockpit which is raised 8-12" above main tank and run hose down fill tube for about 3.5' - so is likely right before 90 degree fitting into the main tank. I've tried from the rear deck, but the height from bladder to main tank is much too small (3-4") to keep a siphon running.Right about condensation issues. I wake up in the morning with all house windows covered in condensate on the outside as the indoor temp is so low compared to outdoor and dew point. AC vents are blowing towards windows as well!!!
On the boat yes no E10 around marina either and temp variations are "small" as boat is kept in vented covered storage with same humidity and temp as outside. Summer to winter yes some difference but it comes gradually and boat is used all year round so not really a big issue, but keeping tanks at high level anyway.
Siphoning is a fairly fast way of transfer but deck fill is fairly high up so how deep do you drop the 1/2 in and how do you prime it?
I have one of those check valve hoses that can be used as a primer if possible to shake it in the bladder but then the opening has to enable it. Is that how you do it?
h
Yup.. the purpose of the filter is to catch that water. If water is excessive.. check for other sources of intrusion.If your pickup is sucking water from the bottom of the tank, your water separator will fill with water. The water has to go somewhere.
I haven't bothered doing the thermodynamics calculations, even thinking about it makes my head hurt, but I think the "air" space in a tank above the fuel surface is mostly fuel vapor and not air and therefore not water from said air. So while condensation is real, I just don't think condensation alone will account for fuel/ water seperators repeatedly filling with water. If you repeatedly have water in your fuel, FIND another source than condensation.Right about condensation issues. I wake up in the morning with all house windows covered in condensate on the outside as the indoor temp is so low compared to outdoor and dew point. AC vents are blowing towards windows as well!!!
On the boat yes no E10 around marina either and temp variations are "small" as boat is kept in vented covered storage with same humidity and temp as outside. Summer to winter yes some difference but it comes gradually and boat is used all year round so not really a big issue, but keeping tanks at high level anyway.
Siphoning is a fairly fast way of transfer but deck fill is fairly high up so how deep do you drop the 1/2 in and how do you prime it?
I have one of those check valve hoses that can be used as a primer if possible to shake it in the bladder but then the opening has to enable it. Is that how you do it?
h