I have a 1988 Sea Ox 18? dual console (awesome boat) I have owned it for 4 years and it?s a beast. This year I started getting fuel in the bilge when I fill it up and its getting worse. It has a 50 gallon internal aluminum tank. All fuel lines are double clamped and seem tight, no signs of leaks at those connections. I don?t see any leaks on the top side of the tank and there is no leakage after the initial fill up.
So I pulled the floor to get at all the hoses, fill & vent and pull them out. I thought for sure I would find a crack or something obvious in one of the hoses. The vent lines seem fine. The fill line was a bit dried out and cracked. All lines are 20 years old and probably not designed for ethanol blend. I filled the hoses with water thinking for sure I would see a leak dripping some place but I didn?t see any leaks. On the fill hose were it does a 90 degree to the tank it appeared pretty dry rotted and stains of possible leakage.
Do you think perhaps the fuel would penetrate through the hose and not the water?
What should I do next?
I plan on replacing all the hoses of course but I really like to know if that is really the problem. I also thought of trying to pressurize the tank some how.
So I pulled the floor to get at all the hoses, fill & vent and pull them out. I thought for sure I would find a crack or something obvious in one of the hoses. The vent lines seem fine. The fill line was a bit dried out and cracked. All lines are 20 years old and probably not designed for ethanol blend. I filled the hoses with water thinking for sure I would see a leak dripping some place but I didn?t see any leaks. On the fill hose were it does a 90 degree to the tank it appeared pretty dry rotted and stains of possible leakage.
Do you think perhaps the fuel would penetrate through the hose and not the water?
What should I do next?
I plan on replacing all the hoses of course but I really like to know if that is really the problem. I also thought of trying to pressurize the tank some how.