greeny
Well-Known Member
OK I give up!
Still going to fill the tank though.

Still going to fill the tank though.
My elderly Prout had a single engine with outdrive leg on the bridgedeck and fuel tank under the cockpit. It kept all the smelly stuff well away from the accomodation. So yes, some cats do have fuel tanks above the waterline.It's a side issue .... but do some cats really have the fuel tanks in the bridgedeck? I would have thought that carrying all that weight so high is rather counter-productive when they could be easily mounted down in the hulls near the engines.
I've just got to the end of a tank I last filled up in 2014. No ill effects.My experience is similar to yours. For reasons I won't go into here (it's a long story) our boat was out of the water for nearly two years. Prior to going back in I ran the engine to check and it started right away on what must have been 3 year old diesel in a half-empty tank.
Experince with silcia gel filters is that 2-5 ounces per year (12 months) is typical. Less than1/3 of that would be absorbed by the fuel. Remember, deisel can absorb water without actual condensation, and that condensation will fall through the diesel and not evaporate during the day. It tends to be a one-way thing. So only an ounce or so in the off season. With gasoline, particularly E10, the rates are as much as 10 times higher, since breathing is much greater. There is also evaporation.Agree, my 40 years of experience, I have never had water in a tank through not filling it over winter and I have done the calculations that show the amount you could get is insignificant. I am, however, meticulous about a good seal on the filler.
www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk
Indeed, that.Your car is outside, and prone to condensation.
The fuel in your tank is inside. With changes in air pressure, some airflow might occur in the vent pipe, potentially bringing moist air in. But the subsequent increase in air pressure in the tank would drive air back up the vent pipe. On balance, unless the tank is huge and empty, I reckon the same air will mainly flow back and forth in the vent pipe. So I don't think much moisture is going to find its way in.
Thanks for all the interesting responses, my conclusion is to leave it half full. Also to ensure that the filler and/or vent is well sealed.
Only if you have cleaned the tanks and pipes before running lots of white through the system and then using in the car when not needed.Would using white garage diesel be better for the overwintering than the over priced red stuff? It seems it’s cheaper ar ASDA than many marine places?
But the water content of that litre of air is really very small, and not much of that will condense for a typical change in temperature.I think you will find that the tank will breathewith fluctuations in temperature and atmospheric pressure more than pvb is suggesting
If you have a tank with a capacity of around 200 litres it will contain 100 litres of air when half full
A pressure fluctuation of 10 mb or a temperature fluctuation of slightly less than 3°C will result in the tank drawing in or expelling a 1 litre of air.
pvb suggests that the volume change will be taken up by the volume of the tank vent hose . However 2 metres ( a likely length given the size of the boat) of 16 mm bore hose has an internal volume of less than half of that.
If the temperature falls below the dewpoint of the air in the tank condensation will occur. Although it is impossible to make ant sensible estimate of the volume of water condensing the effect is cumulative
To prevent this you will have to tightly seal the tank vent ( or fill the tank)
If you have a tank with a capacity of around 200 litres it will contain 100 litres of air when half full
A pressure fluctuation of 10 mb or a temperature fluctuation of slightly less than 3°C will result in the tank drawing in or expelling a 1 litre of air.
pvb suggests that the volume change will be taken up by the volume of the tank vent hose . However 2 metres ( a likely length given the size of the boat) of 16 mm bore hose has an internal volume of less than half of that.
I know some folks had trouble with asda petrol in certain cars. Maybe it was a bad batch.Would using white garage diesel be better for the overwintering than the over priced red stuff? It seems it’s cheaper ar ASDA than many marine places?
You've used the size of the boat to predict a possible length of the vent pipe, and I'd say your guess of 2 metres is on the low side, bearing in mind the need for swan-neck looping. The OP has a Rival 34. Online brokers' details suggest the Rival 34 has either a 90 litre or a 110 litre fuel tank - half the size you've chosen to use for your calculations! If you use the correct figure for the tank capacity, and a more realistic vent pipe length, my theory makes sense.
I have been mislead by the fact that he calls it a "Westerly yacht called Golden Eye" in his blog Doesn't look like a Rival either
Somehow I'd deduced that he had an Oceanlord
In that case, I've been misled by his profile, which says he has a Rival 34. And he doesn't list a blog in his profile, so where did you find that?
It took me a while to retrace my steps He signs off one post with a reference to Elaine and Julian's Sailing Adventures
In another ( last year I think) he refers to an Oceanlord.
I assume Golden eye is the Oceanlord