• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Leaky Steel Liquid fert tank

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • biglentil
    Senior Member
    • Jun 2015
    • 3261

    Leaky Steel Liquid fert tank

    Have an older 25000gal metal fert tank I would like store starter phos in. Problem is the floor is rusty and leaks. Anyone have a fix or referral of someone? Thanks
  • farmaholic
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2010
    • 17478

    #2
    Yikes....I don't know if that's a chance I'd be willing to take.

    If there's one hole I bet there would be other leaks not far behind.

    Comment

    • furrowtickler
      Senior Member
      • Dec 2004
      • 21864

      #3
      There are bladders that can be put in , also we were told there is a company that does fibreglass inserts .
      Sorry I have no further info on them . We were looking at a similar issue a few years ago.

      Comment

      • the big wheel
        Senior Member
        • Mar 2017
        • 3860

        #4
        When it's that far gone it's risky. Also chunks of rust going into distribution system not good

        Comment

        • tweety
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2014
          • 3059

          #5
          Good time to switch to granular

          Comment

          • blackpowder
            Senior Member
            • Feb 2010
            • 9258

            #6
            Tweety. If I had to go back to all dry, I'd retire.

            Comment

            • WiltonRanch
              Senior Member
              • Jul 2012
              • 4512

              #7
              Originally posted by tweety View Post
              Good time to switch to granular
              Tore the the meter housing and crap off the bottom of the fert tank on my 1900 Deere cart cause the urea ate the places I can't clean out. Lol. Aside from ammonia liquid and granular have great ability in ****ing anything that isn't stainless. The hills, lack of horsepower, and extra cost I'd never go liquid but guys who use it seem to like it. They exclusively farm level land around here. Aside from that if you have a leak in the tank best to check out the integrity of the tank. Lots of oilfield inspection companies probably looking for work could radiograph the tank to tell you where you're at. Cheaper than losing a tank of fertilizer. If it's fixable there's enough oilfield tank builders that could probably fix it for you. Are these tanks stainless or epoxy coated?
              Last edited by WiltonRanch; Oct 4, 2017, 15:51.

              Comment

              • shtferbrains
                Senior Member
                • Jun 2017
                • 5193

                #8
                Where did the tank come from and why do you think it is leaking out the floor?
                Most tanks leak at the level of the product. Often near bottom from sitting near empty.

                If the tank isn't to old (less than 10 yrs) you can have some cut off the bottom and slide a new floor under it .

                Old fuel tanks have rotten bottoms because the water stays on the bottom ant the fuel floats on top.

                10-34-0 leaves a rock hard layer when stored in new tanks. Some is made from spent acid from steel mills where the use Phos-acid to give new steel that dirty black coating.

                Comment

                • biglentil
                  Senior Member
                  • Jun 2015
                  • 3261

                  #9
                  Its was bought at auction a few years back, its painted regular steel. We set it up on a concrete base and stuck a super b of fert in. Wet patch comimg from undeneath developed nothing wet on the side walls. Emptied her and here we are.
                  Last edited by biglentil; Oct 4, 2017, 20:25.

                  Comment

                  • Rareearth
                    Senior Member
                    • Aug 2012
                    • 1618

                    #10
                    To me it seems the plastic tanks are best and lower price.
                    Next fibreglass ?
                    Then stainless?

                    It looks like fewer fibreglass tanks now, now sure if they are too expensive or they fail and leak?

                    Comment

                    • Reply to this Thread
                    • Return to Topic List
                    Working...