Re: Does a boat with an outboard need a blower?
First the law. In the USA, Canada and the EU, if you have an inboard gasoline engine with a cranking motor (an electric starting motor) you must have powered ventilation; i.e. a blower. An outboard mounted outside does not qualify.
Also the law requires a space with a fuel tank and non-ignition protected electrical equipment to be ventilated. That means if you have any electrical stuff that can make a spark, in the same space as the fuel tank, then you have to ventilate that space. If the electrical stuff is ignition protected you don't have to ventilate. If there is no electrical stuff in there then you don't have to ventilate.
The above is not opinion, it is the law in the US, Canada and EU.
The means of ventilation can be natural or powered. Natural is just two holes, one an intake and the other an exhaust. The size of the holes depends on the size of the compartment. Which is which depends on whether the boat is moving, or if standing still or drifting, which way the wind is blowing. It really doesn't matter. Also, if you have 15 square inches of area open to the outside for every cubic foot of net compartment volume, the space is considered by the USCG and everbody else as open to the atmosphere.
Powered ventilation is a blower. If you have tanks and electrical stuff in there I would definitely go with powered. It is not required, but hey, it's your life we are talking about here. Make sure it is an ignition protected marine blower. You need to size the blower based on the size of the space. And you need to size the ducting for the exhaust blower the same way. see the following
http://newboatbuilders.com/pages/vent.html About half way down the page is a link to a graph of airflow vs compartment volume. But read the page and you will learn all about ventilating boats.
Now practical matters. Gasoline is nasty stuff. Gas vapors go boom whenever there is a mixture between 14:1 and 7:1, and a source of ignition. That's also why carburetors work. If you can smell gas, assume you have a leak. You might not, but better safe than sorry. Your nose is the best fume detector there is. However, after about five minutes the nerves in your nose will get desensitized and you won't smell it anymore, so take care of it when you first smell it. The best way to detect a leak in the tank or your fuel lines is to have it pressure tested. Most marine repair shops can do this.
Any way, probably more than you wanted to know.