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Thread: Advice On Building a Arch From an Old 265 Gallon Fuel Oil Tank

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2011
    Location
    MN
    Posts
    24

    Default Advice On Building a Arch From an Old 265 Gallon Fuel Oil Tank

    Hungry Beaver, would you care to give me any advice on building an arch from an old 265 gallon fuel oil tank?
    2013 tapped 18 maple and boxelder, made 5 gallons.
    2014 tapped 75, made 7 gallons.
    2015 tapped 100, made 11 gallons
    2016 going to tap 100 maple, 25 boxelder, ?birch, ?ironwood and 2 black walnut.

    Patriot Guard Riders http://www.patriotguard.org/q

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2013
    Location
    Lisbon, NH
    Posts
    385

    Default

    just search oil tank evaporator and you'll get a ton of info. A bunch of us have built them. Pretty easy, especially if you have basic welding skills.
    Pete Nightingale
    Lisbon, NH

    3 Teenage sap haulers & Plenty of friends and family to restock the beer fridge
    2012 1 tap and a pot
    2013 10 taps, oil tank evap, 2 gallons of slightly too thin syrup
    2014 48 taps improved oil tank evap 3.5 gallons, ouch??
    2015 88 taps 78 5/16" and 10 3/16" nat vac 40"x 48" Homemade Arch 13.25 Gallons
    2016 100 taps 65 on 3/16 & 35 buckets 17 gallons + unknown amount of maple / Jack Daniels testers

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2015
    Location
    Fleur De Lys/St. John's NL Canada
    Posts
    1

    Default Best Design

    I'm going to build a oil tank evaporator for a couple of years now. And now that I have a tank, there are a lot more designs out there.

    Now I have to figure the best design and built it.

    It seems that there are a couple of important things

    Surface area. (Larger is better) So is it better, to have the stack, position on the end of the tank?
    How close the heat is to the pans. 1" to 4 "
    Pans Flat, or with or without raffles/baffles?
    The size of the fire box (Does it matter if wood, or Oil (Maybe smaller?))
    The length of the stack for drawing.

    If you made one today, what would your design look like.

    Cheers

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2012
    Location
    Birdsboro PA
    Posts
    1,326

    Default

    https://youtu.be/whRR8BlfocY
    Here's mine, and I'm very happy with it. I extended it for a 6' pan. 8" stack 12' high. Only 1" - 1-1/2" under the back of the pan. The fire box is about 18" deep and about the same for height.
    first year 2012 50 taps late season made 2 1/2 gals.

    2013 2x6 homemade arch 180 taps. 20 Gals.

    2014 40 on 3/16 gravity 160 on buckets.

    http://omasranch.wix.com/omasmaple

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2016
    Location
    minn.
    Posts
    2

    Default

    if you have not built one yet, and are south of the cities, gladly show you the one I made. just pm me if you want to see.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Nov 2010
    Location
    West central Minnesota
    Posts
    91

    Default

    I built one 5 years ago. I started with angle iron on the bottom and mounted some pneumatic wheels from grainger on it so it stays mobile. I have it set up for a 2 x 4 pan. Firebox is about 16 -18 inches deep. The ramp starts at the end of the firebox, about 5 inches below the pan, and tapers up to 1.5 inches from the pan on the flue end.

    6 inch exit, and I run 8 to 10 feet of pipe and it draws very well.

    I lined the interior with hi temp insulation and then fire bricked everything.

    Added a small blower on the front, and that helped a lot.

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