PDA

View Full Version : Looking for sap transport tank



wurmdert
03-07-2018, 04:50 PM
Anyone in the northern half of the state got a 300 to 500 gallon poly tansport tank they wanna sell? 200gals at a time is getting costly and time consuming?

SeanD
03-07-2018, 05:33 PM
Sorry, I don't have a tank for you, but I am curious. What kind of vehicle do you have for hauling those amounts of sap? My truck needs to be put down and I'll be in the market for a new one this summer.

maple flats
03-07-2018, 07:08 PM
If you get a bigger tank, make sure your truck or trailer can safely handle it.Many use a 275 gal IBC container, that is over 2200 pounds, if completely full as long as it's no too heavy for the vehicle is not too bad, but at 80-90% full it can steer the truck to places you'd rather not go unless the truck is big enough.

Haynes Forest Products
03-07-2018, 07:13 PM
I use 2 totes with the cam-locs hooked together so they fill together or close the valve and only fill one. Big tanks without dividers can cause a surging problem. having smaller tanks in tandem makes loading them easy and you have less surge. I also have a manifold that fills them from the top thru bulkhead fittings.

SeanD
03-07-2018, 08:10 PM
I use 2 totes with the cam-locs hooked together so they fill together or close the valve and only fill one. Big tanks without dividers can cause a surging problem. having smaller tanks in tandem makes loading them easy and you have less surge. I also have a manifold that fills them from the top thru bulkhead fittings.

Do the two totes face each other valve to valve or do they face the same way? I'm curious how you unload the sap.

wurmdert
03-07-2018, 08:31 PM
I have a 225 on my f250 super duty right now plus a gang box full of tools and it goes fine. I figure if I take the gang box off then 300 gals will be fine. The sugarhouse I sell to has to haul every gallon from 4200 taps and they do it all with one f350 superduty and a 420 gal tank without any problems

wurmdert
03-07-2018, 08:34 PM
I use 2 totes with the cam-locs hooked together so they fill together or close the valve and only fill one. Big tanks without dividers can cause a surging problem. having smaller tanks in tandem makes loading them easy and you have less surge. I also have a manifold that fills them from the top thru bulkhead fittings.

I was thinking of doing something like this with two ibc totes on a trailer when I get ready to do my expansion in a year or two. But trailers are such a pain especially in mud and slimy spring time roads.

Haynes Forest Products
03-07-2018, 09:35 PM
I have the totes so the valves are on the passenger side. I have a transfer pump that will suck from the totes at my woods into the trailer totes. I can then switch 2 valves and suck out of the trailer totes into my bulk tanks. I can also use the pump for transferring from any tank to any tank. I can fill both my tanks or only one I can also suck out of just one into someone else's tank. Plus I can suck from one into the other. I know it sounds complicated but when you get in the heat of the battle and tanks are running over and you need room in tanks that are full of whatever you need options.

maple flats
03-08-2018, 08:21 AM
I haul 3 totes on a gooseneck trailer with an F350, 2 for sap and the third carries about 100 gal of permeate to rinse the woods tank. After I pump out the woods tank, I turn the pump around, hook to the permeate tote, attach a reducer I have that reduces the flow down to a 5/16 tube. That does a nice job if cleaned soon after emptying so everything is still wet. My pump is a Honda WX15.
If you have enough truck, this method works fine. On my last haul of the season last year, I drained the third tank and filled that with sap too. Sap had not quit running but the sugar had dropped to 1.0, I called it quits.

wurmdert
03-08-2018, 09:26 AM
Im thinking more that a trailer is the way to go. It also frees my truck bed during the season.

Cody
03-08-2018, 09:55 AM
We haul our sap in a 425 gallon poly tank on a F250 does just fine.

SeanD
03-08-2018, 03:19 PM
The trailer is the most efficient in terms of weight and space, but I don't have enough room to maneuver my truck with crew cab and full sized bed AND another 8-10' of trailer at a couple of pickups. If I did, that would be the way to go. The payloads of the F250 and the Silverado 2500 HD are looking promising. I'm still doing homework on the Dodge Rams.

Brian
03-08-2018, 06:26 PM
I haul sap with 2 f250s, they both have 500 gallon poly tanks in them. If it weren't for mud season I would have 735 gallon tanks in them.You know what they say about 3/4 ton trucks, they will handle 3 or 4 tons!!