thanks again for the advice, everyone.
many useful/interesting responses.
i think i'll grab a cap for the fill pipe from the hardware store tonight. doesn't really help my situation at all, but it's a small bandaid that will make me feel a little better. lol
i should have my well water tested for organic solvent residues. but maybe via an independent lab instead of the county lab so i can keep it a little more confidential. (and as a reminder, no one has been drinking the water anyways due to unrelated issues with the well cap)
Are you sure there is any more oil in there then just a film on top? Dipping a hose into the tank filled with water with just a thin film of oil floating on top, will leave the hose coated in oil..as you pull it back out... make sure you know what you got......I would drop a ridged pipe down to the bottom and start pumping ......
you're right, i should try to find out how much water vs oil is in there.
but because i have a vague memory from when i was a kid of someone (i don't even remember who!) telling me about this tank and implying it had fuel and was therefore "valuable",
i'm assuming there's a substantial amount of oil in it.
i know there's oil in it now (dipped a piece of garden hose into it and pulled it out), and there's also probably an unknown quantity of water from the uncapped fill pipe.
interestingly, before i dipped the hose into the fill pipe, the fill pipe had no odor. (it smells like fuel now because the hose dribbled some on the pipe's inside wall on its way up and out)
You don't want to be pumping this yourself .... spill or drip any oil and now no one can tell if it's the tank or you. It takes very little spilled oil to confuse the situation.
interesting point. i definitely don't want to cause a false positive test result by superficially contaminating the soil through my efforts. if i decide to try it myself, i'll be careful and also put some tarps down.
i wish i knew how big the tank was and how much fuel is in there. idk if i'm the man for the job if there's hundreds of gallons of oil in there.
maybe i could buy some 55 gallon drums and fill those, but what if it takes like 10 drums to do the job? yeesh
Are you sure the house is only from the 70's -- that heater looks older. Did your grandfather burn wood ..that's a wood furnace?
yes, the house is from the early 70s. my grandma was the second owner and purchased it in the mid 80s.
to my knowledge, she never used that furnace. or that oil tank.
it's totally possible that that furnace has nothing to do with the fuel tank.
anyway, i'm assuming the tank is original to the house, so
it could be 45-50 years old.
great link, ty
Is the line still going in the house with a shut off valve ? If so a put a bucket under it and open the valve to see what comes out.
no, i'm not seeing anything like that in the basement.
Another option for evacuating the tank that I don't think has yet been mentioned, pressurize it with a compressor ****** where the vent was removed and a reasonably air tight dip tube to the bottom with a valve then hose on the top. No pump needed.
interesting idea. i could see that working pretty well, but i'm too much of a wuss to try it.
I have done permitting, plans review, and site inspections for installation of UST's in the State of Florida, and I have a S.A.R.A. certificate
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good info, ty