I'm the long time owner of a 17' Osprey that was manufactured in 1988.
My boat has always been located in south Florida and used only in salt water.
In 1999 I decided that my aluminum fuel tank had deteriorated sufficiently
that I should replace it was a new aluminum tank. My original factory
installed tank when removed looked very similar in condition to the photos
shown in this thread of other tanks being removed from Aquasports. Not
a pretty sight, and only after a dozen years.
I chose to have a local fabricator who worked in aluminum make me a new
custom made tank, after I vistited their shop and saw that they were were in
fact fully skilled to do the job; they had several boating projects in process
at the time of my visit. They built me a new tank from 1/8" thick "5086"
aluminum. "5086" is an aluminum alloy specifically for marine applications
such as building hulls of aluminum. It is corrosion resistant and I'm adding
here a photo of what my "5086" tank looks like 13 years after I installed it
in my Aquasport (see photo showing fuel gage through clear plastic "pie
plate" - NO corrosion of the aluminum). Any one having a tank made should
ask about having it done in "5086"; it will cost more but will last much longer.
Suggest you "Wikipaedia" the words "Aluminum Alloy" and then go down
and click on "5086" and read about this specific alloy.
The main point of this post is to advise that I was able to increase the fuel
capacity of my tank from the factory 27 gallons to a new 35 gallon capacity.
This was accomplished by my measuring the tank well of the boat and then
having the new tank made to fill that space completely but with ample room
to get the tank in place (and remove it later if necessary). The new tank's
end-on view is keystone shaped (20" at bottom and 22" at top) rather than
the original tank's 20" dimension for both top and bottom, and is 1" taller
than the original tank.
I do take very good care of my boat, wash it after every use, and store it
inside. I've just finished reworking it and it currently looks like a new boat. The
rework included putting on a 2011 year model 90hp Evinrude E-tec motor which
is a fuel injected 2-stroke engine. I've now tested that motor, using new GPS
electronics (Garmin 740S) to calculate speed and have updated my "Specs Card"
to include the new E-tec. I'm posting a photo of that card here as others might
want to do something similar. The "Card" was made on my computer's word
processor and then taken to a "Kinkos", now "FedX" store and there "plasticized"
(encapsulated in a plastic sleeve) that makes it durable and waterproof (costs
$two bucks). I got the floor fuel gage readings for my 35 gallon tank on the
first fuel fill after the tank was fabricated and completely empty to start.
My new electronics include (1) Evinrude's "I-Command" digital multifunction gage,
(made by Lowrence) , which shows actual fuel burn to the tenth of a gallon per hour
at every engine RPM, and (2) a Garmin 740S Charplotter which gives GPS speed and
which can also "import" all of the information produced by the "I-Command" system.
Between these two pieces of electronics there is NOTHING that you don't know
when you're running your boat: RPM, Speed, Fuel Burn, Miles per Gallon, Engine
Temp, Battery Voltage, Water Depth, Water Temp, etc.
NorthPalmBeach, FL