Bill Edmundson wrote:
I put mine on the side of the boat as high as I could. But, there needs to be a loop in the line up higher than the vent. That way water can't back flow to the tank.
Bill
That loop in the line is a good idea.
I bought a boat with three tanks. It was a Factory made boat. Atlas. and believe it or not, it had vents up high, but no loop or Float blocking the water from coming in.
In rough water I'd see a "Sheen" of fuel out behind the boat.
I had to ask, and learned the hard way.
If your loop gets fuel or water in the bottom of the loop, the tank wont vent without pulling that Liquid down into the tank.
If I ever do that again, I'll have some kind of Float/switch in the Vent line. So it will stay open until something like gush of Salt Water tries to go down that pipe. The float will drop down, close the Fuel line off, and let the Salt water go out a side hole.
Also, to help, put the Vent outlet up forward and as High as you can get it.
If your going to be diving under the water, the weight of the Water will force it's way past that loop.
I had water up over the gunnels frequently. Even up over the Cab.
Water's pretty heavy. It's gonna find its way down so don't give it any chance at all.
My last boat had a good, large, deep, water separator between the Tanks and the engine.
I was amazed at how much water came out of that thing every week.