pmagowan
Well-Known Member
In my design of a new 40 odd foot sailing boat I have been looking at various fuel and water tank possibilities. I have come to a few conclusions and wanted to run them past the panel.
I want to have reasonable capacity for fuel being that this will be a potential bluewater cruiser. The problem with fuel is weight so I will try to put the tanks as low as possible. To do this I will have to split them into two tanks, one on either side running along the hull. They will be integrated into the hull for most efficient use of space and also because they then provide a 'double-hull' for added protection from sinking. I will then need a 'day tank' for feeding the engine. This could be considerably smaller and above the engine for ease of bleeding and to prevent air sucking into the fuel lines.
All this will need to be controlled throught the transfer of fuel from tank to tank. I have just discovered microprocessors and controllers such as the raspberry pi and the arduino and was thinking that this could be useful. My idea is to have a fuel level sensor in each tank, an 'in' valve (motorised) and an 'out' valve for each tank and a pump with a racor filter on it. The tanks will be connected in parallel with the pump so that transfer of fuel from one tank to another simply involves opening the 'out' valve for the tank giving fuel and opening the 'in' valve for the tank recieving fuel and then turning the pump on.
This could all be controlled by a microcontroller which is in turn controlled by a Raspberry pi with a nice user interface (The pi could also handle GPS data, media, battery monitoring, engine monitoring etc). So, for instance, in normal operating mode the day tank would be kept full with the level being monitored and the fuel transfered as required. The tanks would be kept ballanced. There would be fail to safe, as in if the pi died the microcontrollers would default to normal operating and if they died there would be manual override and if the electrics died there would be a manual fuel lift pump.
I know it sounds a bit complicated but I would be interested in your thoughts as the system would have loads of plus points: fuel polishing, weight distribution, tank capacity, gravity feed to engine etc. I see the Pi as being a central hub on the boat which could distribute wifi, nmea data and multimedia as required as well as providing a nice user interface to see the level of tanks, temperatures of engine and batteries, leak detection etc etc.
I want to have reasonable capacity for fuel being that this will be a potential bluewater cruiser. The problem with fuel is weight so I will try to put the tanks as low as possible. To do this I will have to split them into two tanks, one on either side running along the hull. They will be integrated into the hull for most efficient use of space and also because they then provide a 'double-hull' for added protection from sinking. I will then need a 'day tank' for feeding the engine. This could be considerably smaller and above the engine for ease of bleeding and to prevent air sucking into the fuel lines.
All this will need to be controlled throught the transfer of fuel from tank to tank. I have just discovered microprocessors and controllers such as the raspberry pi and the arduino and was thinking that this could be useful. My idea is to have a fuel level sensor in each tank, an 'in' valve (motorised) and an 'out' valve for each tank and a pump with a racor filter on it. The tanks will be connected in parallel with the pump so that transfer of fuel from one tank to another simply involves opening the 'out' valve for the tank giving fuel and opening the 'in' valve for the tank recieving fuel and then turning the pump on.
This could all be controlled by a microcontroller which is in turn controlled by a Raspberry pi with a nice user interface (The pi could also handle GPS data, media, battery monitoring, engine monitoring etc). So, for instance, in normal operating mode the day tank would be kept full with the level being monitored and the fuel transfered as required. The tanks would be kept ballanced. There would be fail to safe, as in if the pi died the microcontrollers would default to normal operating and if they died there would be manual override and if the electrics died there would be a manual fuel lift pump.
I know it sounds a bit complicated but I would be interested in your thoughts as the system would have loads of plus points: fuel polishing, weight distribution, tank capacity, gravity feed to engine etc. I see the Pi as being a central hub on the boat which could distribute wifi, nmea data and multimedia as required as well as providing a nice user interface to see the level of tanks, temperatures of engine and batteries, leak detection etc etc.