Peggie's advice about vents
I'm glad Peggie checked in with what has to seem to her like a broken-record-like mantra of 'vent line, vent line, vent line!' I've been moonlighting at West Marine and have repeated it to everyone. The vent line just has to be big enough to to allow real air (oxygen) into the tank. Peggie advises a vertical vent, or, if it must go out a side wall of the tank, two, one to either side. The hose should be 3/4" minimum, 1" preferred. There should be no check valves, kinks, or tight turns in the hose line. The good thing about that is a sailboat usually spends its time with wind on the side, so that with a vent to either side you might just get flow-through ventilation-- the best thing you could have.This is not a subject most people like chatting about, and I'll bet the vast majority of people choose to live in denial about it. But facts don't lie, and denial usually comes up and spanks us. I replaced my stupid little 5/8" gas-tank vents with their unnecessary flame-arrestor screens, that I chose just because they looked cute (just like the overwhelming majority of production boats use-- with their airless stinky holding tanks and myriad of chemicals from a whole 'nother industry just to stop the stink). I found a terrific all-stainless Attwood through-hull in 3/4" hose size and am installing one on each side to provide cross-ventilation for the (plastic) holding tank under the vee berth in my H-25.Ronco tanks are good quality and their service from California is excellent. I've bought them for C-44 production.