In an effort to stop the source of odor in our boat, I replaced the hoses a while back, but the odor remains. I recently noticed a small pool of brown that can be seen under the bottom edge of the holding tank. Given that the location was on the side of the tank where all the fittings are, I suspected those fittings were leaking, though feeling along these fittings revealed no dampness.
So, I tried a different strategy... I cleaned up the stuff, and then put a folded up clean paper towel below the fittings (right above where the liquid was collecting). Checking back a few weeks later, the top of the paper towel was clear, but there was a new batch of liquid underneath.
Given that it appears that the leak is not coming from the fittings, I guess that leaves just the tank itself. The leak is apparently very slow... the "liquid" I observed is not free-flowing, but rather more like a small and thin area of damp brown goo, as if the leak is just barely keeping up with evaporation.
I guess my next step is to remove the tank to verify. If there is indeed a leak, is it something that I can repair with a glue of some sort, or do I just replace the tank? It's polyethylene.
--Michael
So, I tried a different strategy... I cleaned up the stuff, and then put a folded up clean paper towel below the fittings (right above where the liquid was collecting). Checking back a few weeks later, the top of the paper towel was clear, but there was a new batch of liquid underneath.
Given that it appears that the leak is not coming from the fittings, I guess that leaves just the tank itself. The leak is apparently very slow... the "liquid" I observed is not free-flowing, but rather more like a small and thin area of damp brown goo, as if the leak is just barely keeping up with evaporation.
I guess my next step is to remove the tank to verify. If there is indeed a leak, is it something that I can repair with a glue of some sort, or do I just replace the tank? It's polyethylene.
--Michael