BruceK
Well-Known Member
As Petem would say should have bought a fairline!
pfff Fairline did a copycat of the Formula design AFAIC and a good many others. I raise my Formula to his Targa but if he wants to swap we can talk turkey
As Petem would say should have bought a fairline!
I have a pal with a major fuel tank issue, he has gained access to them by cutting a large hole in the hull. He is in the boat repair business though, his reasoning being fixing the hull is cheaper and faster than trashing the internals and the floor.Come on guys....think! Anyone who says I have to remove the engine will be put on ignore...
I don’t know about that.... I mean, what would you prefer after some repairs, a dodgy interior or a dodgy hull?I have a pal with a major fuel tank issue, he has gained access to them by cutting a large hole in the hull. He is in the boat repair business though, his reasoning being fixing the hull is cheaper and faster than trashing the internals and the floor.
I don’t know about that.... I mean, what would you prefer after some repairs, a dodgy interior or a dodgy hull?
I didn't know the Fairline Targa range was a direct copy of the Formula design but I did know some Cranchi's were.pfff Fairline did a copycat of the Formula design AFAIC and a good many others. I raise my Formula to his Targa but if he wants to swap we can talk turkey![]()
Nice Pete .Good install of a tank given the space / boat L .For @Portofino a replacement tank in a Fairline Targa...
Ok. That’s original thinking ?BOUBA might be a silly question but is there room for a tank some where else or even two one either side .
Are you realy debating with yourself on an open forum.If I put the tank on the starboard side, it would stop me servicing many wires (everything runs down the crawl space. And I wouldn’t be able to service the macerator on the black water tank.
Also the tank would be long, and run fore to aft, so there’s a risk of starving the engine of fuel as the boat rocks up and down...
But the crawl space is big and is wasted space....
Yes I am but feel free to chime in..??Are you realy debating with yourself on an open forum.
The water tank is only 300 liters and the fuel tank is 800...but it’s a clever idea...ok out of the box convert the water tank to to diesel then cut the end out of the old diesel tank put a liner in and use as water .
Unfortunately I recently got a Tesla......Got it , do what google has done , drain the fuel put it in his car , put the boat on a trailer to save on mooring and just polish it .
Dont forget to order spare door handles.Unfortunately I recently got a Tesla......
I could have run the Volvo car for months on what I’m throwing away....
Unfortunately a few events have happened at the same time, hurtling my back being a biggie. I’m much better but just unscrewing and rescrewing the sender was my limit today.250 replies and you have yet to find the cause of the leak, Having replaced the fuel tanks on my last boat a sea line F43 that were oversized from original build, I removed the furniture and flooring, to gain access to both tanks that were each side of engines, had new ones made identical to old ones so easy refit, added drain points to both ends, bilges cleaned up no problem , all done over a few weekends, if I was doing it again, I would , prepurchase the new tanks, remove engines and tanks, fit new tanks and drop engines back in again in one go, you could probably do yours with only moving engine back or just holding up, to gain access to tank.
If you find that it is your Feul tank leaking, and accept it has to come out, it's not that bad, worst part is finding it leaking,
Ours was damaged we think by being caught out in some very big sea,s ,that caused the Feul to break the weld on a baffle at the top off the tank, new tanks were made with more baffling,