The biggest obstacle in regards to using poly tanks is that one is limited in size and shape as to what's out there. The simple way around this is to determine what is the closest that will fit the tank compartment, then build the compartment around the physical shape of the tank.
Quote from: "seabob4"The biggest obstacle in regards to using poly tanks is that one is limited in size and shape as to what's out there. The simple way around this is to determine what is the closest that will fit the tank compartment, then build the compartment around the physical shape of the tank.Exactly what I'm doing.I'm not sure what kind of tank my 230 is - never popped the covers to see.
Frankly Craig, I don't know. I mean, you look at your tank, the tanks in all the 225 Explorers and Ospreys, and they are all doing fine. The 225s have a 102 gal. tank, so Moeller and Incas make them pretty big.The only thing I can really think of, and I may be wrong ( ), is that as you get into bigger tanks for bigger boats, you will start to have multiple users, i.e. twin/triple engines, generator, that sort of thing where you need multiple pickups, and, in the case of diesel applications, returns as well. So obviously tooling costs go up. I've never seen a diesel boat with Roto-molded tanks so there may be an issue with diesel reacting with the poly, I don't know.And yes, usually with larger boats and multiple users you'll find 2 tanks, although PLs 35 Express used a single 450 gal. tank to feed triple O/Bs plus a genset, so multiple tanks aren't the rule...
Awesome, Rick! I've often wondered how you guys went about building new foam stringers from scratch. Now I know...looking good!
At 1/16 thick the fitting should go fast. I wondered about the plan for fitting because it appears as though the height in the stern is considerably less then in the bow and you laid up those nice even stringers. Will you foam once glassed in?
Getting the heights from pre-marked spots is the way to go. I have a habit of forgetting little details like marking stuff before I take it apart ,
with that nice waterline still intact it would be no trouble transferring the heights to the inside of the hull .. I did it once with a BIG home built pair of calipers and as long as I kept the level on it both fore/aft and athwartships it went ok..Before I figured that out things were a tad off !
A buddy recommended a laser pointer taped on a 6 inch level as a good backwoods way of shooting heights around when the string gets in the way.. Necessity is the mother of invention.. Or is it just a mother?