rs2k
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2008
- Messages
- 486
I took out my 100 gallon aluminum tank to clean it the other day because I noticed fuel filter would clog up after only a few hours of use. I power washed and soaped the inside of the tank and was able to get out a boat load of crud. I kept filling and emptying the tank with soapy water until I stopped getting crud. I then let the tank dry, stuck it back in the boat, filled it full of premium and a few cans of sea foam. Now I've made things a few hundred times worse. I think the sea foam and the motion of the boat has knocked a whole bunch of tank crud loose that the power washer couldn't reach. I can only go about a mile before the fuel filter clogs so badly I can't plane any more. After about another 10 minutes at displacement speed I finally have to either replace or back flush the filter because the engines can't even idle any more.
I'm getting 3 basic sizes of crud. Pea sized, sand sized, and silt sized. To stop the fuel pump inlet screen from clogging I created a 3 foot long fuel screen using a cone of fiberglass door screen placed in a steel pipe. The has stopped the pea and sand sized chunks from keeping the system from running, but the normal fuel filter is clogging from the silt sized crud that's in the tank. I figured there can't be that much more crud in the tank so eventually it will all filter out, it doesn't look like that's going to happen any time soon though.
I think I will keep replacing filters until I finally burn the other 70 gallons left in there, but what do with the tank after I can remove it from the boat again?
I'm getting 3 basic sizes of crud. Pea sized, sand sized, and silt sized. To stop the fuel pump inlet screen from clogging I created a 3 foot long fuel screen using a cone of fiberglass door screen placed in a steel pipe. The has stopped the pea and sand sized chunks from keeping the system from running, but the normal fuel filter is clogging from the silt sized crud that's in the tank. I figured there can't be that much more crud in the tank so eventually it will all filter out, it doesn't look like that's going to happen any time soon though.
I think I will keep replacing filters until I finally burn the other 70 gallons left in there, but what do with the tank after I can remove it from the boat again?