Search the forum,

Discuss Water in Oil tank, how to remove ?? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Status
Not open for further replies.

gingalig

Gas Engineer
Messages
217
Hi and thanks in advance for any help, I went out to a breakdown today the tank had a fair bit of water in it when dipped with paste it indicated it to be close to the outlet but not above it, I bled the pump and what came out was pretty grim very contaminated with water approx 70mm,
( the owner had just had a 1000 lts of oil delivered,) I managed to drain about half a gallon out of the tank via the outlet and it flowed clean, ( no filter etc on the tank) cleaned the filter in the pump changed the nozzle because it was badly contaminated and bled through, getting the boiler up and running again. ( not sure for how long with the water issue ) My question is, and please excuse my ignorance whats the best way to remove the water from the tank and how should I dispose of it, I do have a waste disposal liscence but not really sure it covers me for transport of what could be a fair bit of contaminated oil, the tank is 2m round and 1.5m tall, single skin so pretty big. I have advised it needs changing as its not bunded and also fails the fire risk element of the T 1133D by a whole host of issues.
 
You would probably only be looking at 3 5 gallon drums max of water/contaminate. Which you shouldn't need a license to dispose of...will need a fuel pump and battery tho and your local tip usually takes old oil?
 
You would probably only be looking at 3 5 gallon drums max of water/contaminate. Which you shouldn't need a license to dispose of...will need a fuel pump and battery tho and your local tip usually takes old oil?
Around here you need a licence for everything and anything in the van plus local tip now charging for a whole host of things and they wonder why fly tipping is on the increase.
 
Around here you need a licence for everything and anything in the van plus local tip now charging for a whole host of things and they wonder why fly tipping is on the increase.

Oh I'm pretty sure down this way you can carry a certain amount of oil without a license...50litres spring to mind but could be wrong.
 
Around here you need a licence for everything and anything in the van plus local tip now charging for a whole host of things and they wonder why fly tipping is on the increase.

Over here in N.I. we can buy kerosine already in a 20 litre drum at most of the big petrol forecourts.
Or some of the garages have kerosine at the pumps (blue nozzle) and therefore means we can bring our own drums to save money.
Not sure the regs here, but obviously we are permitted to carry some kerosine.
As to the OPs question, - a small amount of water will not do any harm if it is well below the outlet. So all you need to use is a diesel transfer pump with a pipe/hose to very close to base of tank and pump the water into drums until you see it becoming pure kerosine.
The pump inside will need cleaned afterwards.
If tank high enough, you could also have it syphoned by using a garden hose (contaminated, so use for kerosine only) with a copper pipe connected to it for down to tank base. Start it syphoning only by a remote method, such as having the hose initially filled with water and dropping the end of hose into a drum at lower level.
 
Thank you all for the help. Out with the hoses and a pump I will go.

Inspect the top of the tank to see if there is anywhere rain water can enter. I find the flange type screw in lids are obviously letting the rain in on windy days
 
Inspect the top of the tank to see if there is anywhere rain water can enter. I find the flange type screw in lids are obviously letting the rain in on windy days

20180606_125405.jpg
 
Ahh I can see it could be useful, I'll see how my little knock together works out in the morning and may well invest in one. :)
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Reply to Water in Oil tank, how to remove ?? in the Plumbing Jobs | The Job-board area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

Hello plumbers in my internet. So the Mrs want a spray mixer tap in the kitchen as we had two separate taps. I changed the tap for a temporary two hole mixer but the cold water pressure is high mains fed and the hot is low pressure immersion tank fed. I've been trying to find info on what I...
Replies
2
Views
106
Hi, Can anyone advise as to why the cold water to my bathroom keeps airlocking? This originally happened about 12 months ago and has happened 3-4 times since. It’s an upstairs bathroom, fed from a tank in the attic. The tank is about 8 Meters away and feeds a bath, sink and toilet. The tank...
Replies
9
Views
316
  • Question
Ideal Logic 24, Previous problem was that the hot water was only cold or barely warm if the heating was in use. If heating was off and boiler cold then would get hot water most of the time. Changing the flow cartridge about 2 years ago (when I moved in) solved this problem enough to suffer it as...
Replies
2
Views
117
I have had a look at previous posts and think I know the answer to this but just before I make it worse could I just check what you think about this one. Granddaughter just moved house and this valve decided to leak when it was closed. When open its fine. Normally I have repacked the gland on...
Replies
7
Views
181
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock