Why would a tank that is properly installed and maintained (meaning no standing surface water) rust out? The average age of registered cars in the US is 12.2 years, all of which have steel gas tanks. Are they 90-months from needing replacement? My camper van is built on a 2000 Ford E150 chassis. Am I on borrowed time?
Just curious about your very definitive statement.
Peter
Hi Peter. Sticking to a boating thread...
Regarding your perception of a "...definitive statement" (presumably about my rule of thumb of a 20-year life for marine tankage), I'll attempt to be brief here. In my opinion, there are three markers of longevity for tankage: original design, installation, and maintenance. If any of that triad is compromised, the useful life of the tankage goes down. So:
Design: Sound design principles, particularly in volume production, include items such as volume, shape, material, fabrication techniques, and pre-installation quality assurance. Poor material choice, fabrication compromises, poor QA, lack of inspection ports, baffle choices, etc. can doom the tankage to an early failure. Jamming the tankage against the deck, thus precluding routine inspection, or stuffing it under furniture and behind bulkheads or outboard of the engines in a twin installation, etc. can doom the tankage.
Installation: Tankage location within the hull, bedding, ventilation, access to the tankage for inspection and maintenance, valving, etc. are all issues the original boat builder must accommodate in their manufacturing process. Many powerboat manufacturers hide tankage behind sound deadening, precluding access to inspection ports, even if the tank manufacturer provided them in the first place. And in general, my major rant-NO production boat manufacturer provides for post-delivery repair or replacement of tankage (or engines, for that matter) via soft patches in the overhead.
Maintenance: If the design or installation of tankage is poor, maintenance is either absent or unlikely. And absent routine maintenance, including periodic sump drainage (oops, few boats even HAVE drainable sumps), removal of ports for internal cleaning and/or inspection (oops, few boats even HAVE tank hatches), external inspection of water intrusion via deck leaks (oops, most tankage installations preclude ANY external inspection capability) damage from such as water in the fuel can occur, with no knowledge aforethought. Just because you can't see it, doesn't mean your tankage isn't going back to Mother Nature.
So, how did I distill this information into my "20-year life" statement? I will be the very first to admit I've not been on every boat built. I've not worked for every manufacturer. I'm not a trained and educated naval architect. There's LOTS of things I am not. However, I have been in this "boating gig" as an owner, builder, operator, maintainer, inspector, designer, for decades, and my family as well, going back generations. I have distilled those experiences to make my own conclusion(s). They are strictly my own, and should other's personal experiences provide other paradigms, KUHL.
I know this short drivel is in no way definitive. There is no way to quantify life expectancy of marine tankage. Aircraft manufacturers come pretty close on aircraft parts with some very complicated failure analyses and replacement guidelines, and even CAT has put forth end-of-life expectancies of their diesel engines via gallons of fuel consumed. So your guess is as good as mine, my crystal ball is as good as the next guys, and your mileage may vary.
Regards,
Pete
ps-not to stir this pot further, but
in my opinion, much of the postings on this forum requesting guidance on subjective topics (what kind of a boat should I buy, which anchor is best, two engines vs one, how long do fuel tanks last etc.) result in anecdotal postings to the contrary of whatever is postulated, mostly for affirmation of choices already made.