edgephoto
Member
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- 18
- Location
- Stafford, CT
I did not intend to insult you. In my town a tank that is elevated 5-6 feet off the ground would attract attention. A 275 gallon oil tank with the bottom 5-6 feet off the ground would be 8-9 feet off the ground if laid flat. I don't think I could get my oil guy to climb a ladder to fill it. The state also has laws regarding outdoor tanks. I used to live in cow country and it was nice not having to worry about what the people working in town hall thought.Well, I understand the "to each his own" stuff, I didn't understand why "as long as you don't need a ladder to reach the fill" line.
I live on a mountain, we get big winds, my tank is still relatively protected by my house. I feel for ya if you have to fear that your government would issue you a cease & desist order over a tank, I guess that's why I live "out with the cows" in Idaho. I don't think that a tank that has a bottom 5 or 6 feet off the ground is "up in the air", as people have been using gravity to feed fuel forever. Like you said, to each his own.
I will probably go with a 30 gallon drum. That and the day tank will give me 72 hrs or so of operation. Then if I can't easily buy more fuel I will just use oil from my heating oil tank. I am going to tee a fitting and pump off that tank so I can fill jerry cans. I will also use the pump and jerry cans to fill my 30 gallon drum. Diesel fuel is $.80 more per gallon than #2 oil. Not that 30 gallons is that big of an expense. I need to test my setup and the fuel. I may have to add anti-gel to the #2 during winter months.