continued:
Now, thinking back on the symptoms, constant water in the bilge, no water overflow from the vent line when the tank is full, leads me to think that the tank always was leaking, just a small amount but it was increasing.
Anyway after a long sleepless night
I unholstered the SAZWALL and started cutting.
I just can't stand when something is not working as it should!
Cut a small hole in the top of tank (see photo), found split in bottom side edge, proceeded to cut out another hole in top to check out crack, and than had to cut out the baffle to see the extent of the crack. No fun in small crawl space cutting fiberglass but it had to be done.
Now that we had determined the extent of the failure we tried to determine cause of failure. The only thing we can think is that the tank corners were not reinforced enough for some unknown reason and not enough support across the bottom leading to flex and oil canning and over a long period led to fatigue.
Darrell (Dr Fiberglass) was really impressed with the engineering, accessibility, fit and finish of the parts of the Californian that were below decks and more than likely never to be seen.
Kudos to Marshall and the guys in Tustin! Circa 1988.
I had thought about using a custom bladder to fit in original tank bottom, but due to cost and the probability of the tank bottom breaking totally with the weight of the bladder decided against that scenario.
Part 3...
TO BE CONTINUED...