I had my tank built in RI by the guys at
www.lutherswelding.com. I picked them because they were competitively priced with the shops down in Florida, plus I could pick it up and save on shipping. I took out the old tank (75 gal) and used it as a template as far as placing the fill, pickup, vent, and sender. Using AutoCAD I drafted the existing tank exactly as it was, then I stretched it out, made it as big as I could for the space below the console. This, of course, was all before I really started chopping up the boat. I am kicking my self now because I could have gotten a much larger tank in the space than the one I had fabricated (100 gal). Oh well...
The dimensions for the new tank were such that if it got screwed up at all it wasn't going to fit. I made it a point to draft everything out exactly as it should be with strict specs. I sent my drawings to Luther’s and they built exactly what I wanted.
If you are trying to get a bigger tank in there, make sure you have the right dimensions, including the little stuff like height of fill and so on. It would suck to spend $700-$800 on a new tank and find your floor panel rocking on top of the fill pipe.
If you’re interested….
I put my tank drawing (DWF File) up at
http://seacraft.snetsol.com/tank/tank.dwf
To view it in your browser you will have to download the Whip viewer from AutoDesk.
ftp://adeskftp.autodesk.com/WebPub/W...lish/whip4.exe
It is a 4 MB download. Once it is finished install it then go back to the link. Right click in your browser to utilize pan and zoom functions.
BTW.. What ever happened to Steve?????
[ November 20, 2002, 12:20 PM: Message edited by: Rich ]