Hello all,
I decided it was time to replace the sole of the main salon in my 1985 Tartan 40. This past weekend I went down and started ripping out the previously poorly repaired port side and the terribly deteriorated, rotten starboard side.
I bought the boat 2 years ago this month and have been tackling the deferred maintenance and shoddy repair work of the PO.
So, as I started getting the 1/2 inch T&H plywood layer up I noticed that it was glued to q 1/2 inch sub floor with epoxy and that sub floor layer is in rough shape. The sub floor layer goes under the settee fronts and is tabbed to the hull it seems. The settees are where tartan installed 2 48 cal aluminum tanks 32 years ago. I noticed moisture in the sub floor up against these settee fronts.
The condition of those tanks have been a concern for me and I suspected leaking this year. so now that I've git it all ripped apart and have easy access to removing the tanks, I want to replace them. I've also decided to replace all the water piping with a pex manifold and home runs to each fixture. I feel this will make for easy winterization as each fixture will have pretty easy disconnect points at both ends. I should be able to simply drain the whole boat, blow out the lines and not worry about antifreeze so much. this also allows me a shut off point for all fixtures.
I'm excited about the idea of having a fresh water system that would actually be safe to drink!
So now, what about the tanks? I'm considering several things;
1. pulling these testing and repairing (not worth it on such old tanks and there is some negative press on aluminum and drinking water from an aluminum container)
2. Have a poly or a stainless tank made from the original drawing which I have (seem really expensive!)
3. go with flexible fresh water holding tanks (40 to 50 gal models are under $500 each)
I decided it was time to replace the sole of the main salon in my 1985 Tartan 40. This past weekend I went down and started ripping out the previously poorly repaired port side and the terribly deteriorated, rotten starboard side.
I bought the boat 2 years ago this month and have been tackling the deferred maintenance and shoddy repair work of the PO.
So, as I started getting the 1/2 inch T&H plywood layer up I noticed that it was glued to q 1/2 inch sub floor with epoxy and that sub floor layer is in rough shape. The sub floor layer goes under the settee fronts and is tabbed to the hull it seems. The settees are where tartan installed 2 48 cal aluminum tanks 32 years ago. I noticed moisture in the sub floor up against these settee fronts.
The condition of those tanks have been a concern for me and I suspected leaking this year. so now that I've git it all ripped apart and have easy access to removing the tanks, I want to replace them. I've also decided to replace all the water piping with a pex manifold and home runs to each fixture. I feel this will make for easy winterization as each fixture will have pretty easy disconnect points at both ends. I should be able to simply drain the whole boat, blow out the lines and not worry about antifreeze so much. this also allows me a shut off point for all fixtures.
I'm excited about the idea of having a fresh water system that would actually be safe to drink!
So now, what about the tanks? I'm considering several things;
1. pulling these testing and repairing (not worth it on such old tanks and there is some negative press on aluminum and drinking water from an aluminum container)
2. Have a poly or a stainless tank made from the original drawing which I have (seem really expensive!)
3. go with flexible fresh water holding tanks (40 to 50 gal models are under $500 each)