OIL TANK HOME
HOME BUYERS GUIDE TO OIL TANKS
ABANDONED INDOOR OIL TANKS
ABOVE GROUND OIL TANK INSPECTIONS
INSPECT VISIBLE TANKS
OIL FILL & VENT
OIL TANK SUPPORT
ABOVEGROUND OUTDOORS
OIL TANK HISTORY
OIL TANK CHECKLIST
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
THE RISK
LEAK REPORTING
EVIDENCE OF BURIED
REPORT LANGUAGE
TEST THE TANK
FAILURE MECHANISMS
REMOVAL ABANDONMENT
BURIED TANKS, FINDING
SITE INSPECTION
SIGNS OF BURIED OIL TANKS
INSPECT THE GROUNDS
REVIEW TANK HISTORY
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
OIL TANK ABANDONING PROCEDURE
OIL TANK FAILURE CAUSES
OIL TANK FAILURE RATES
OIL TANK DEFECTS
BURIED OIL TANKS
OIL TANK IN GARAGE
OIL TANK NEAR WATER
TANK CLOSE TO FURNACE
TANK EXPOSED TO WEATHER
TANK LEAKY/PATCHED
TANK PIPING DEFECTS
TANK SUPPORT
OIL TANK PIPING DEFECTS
OIL FILL & VENT
OIL LINE EXPOSED
SINGLE HIGH OIL LINE
OIL LINE LEAKS
SINGLE LINE BURIED TANK
DUAL LINE 2 VALVES
HEAT TAPE HAZARD
CAULK PIPE ENTRANCES
NO OIL TANK VENT PIPE
OIL FILL PIPE EXPOSED
OIL FILTER - NONE
FIRE SAFETY CONTROLS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONMENT
ABANDONMENT REGULATIONS
AVOIDING CAVE-INs
REMOVING OLD FUEL
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LIFE
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK INSPECTION REPORTS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
TANK TESTING COs
WATER in OIL TANKS More Information
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Guide to Checking Heating Oil Tank Support Legs, Feet & Piers
OilTankAPedia ©
- How to inspect oil tank feet, piers, protection & support
- Risk of oil tanks tipping over, leaks
- Guide to visual inspection of home heating oil tanks
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Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest.
We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices,
false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at
inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.
This article discusses inspection of oil tank support and piers. The photo above shows a rather questionable "home made" pier supporting an oil tank. There is inadequate bearing surface and the
pier is already tipping. It probably lacks a frost footing. If the pier or foot slips and the oil tank falls over, a costly oil
leak as well as possible damage from loss of heat to the building could be the result. [Photo courtesy Arlene Puentes, Kingston, NY.]
This is a section of our article on inspecting above ground oil tanks for defects.
The article and photographs below give advice and example photos for the visual inspection of above ground oil tanks for leaks and damage
including damaged or leaky oil storage tanks, improper oil tank piping, valves, and indoor-type oil tanks located outdoors.
Here are a some important indicators of tank condition that any home owner or home inspector can examine when an oil storage tank
is visible and accessible inside or at a building. Also see additional visibly detectable oil tank defects listed at
Home Inspection Report Language Library: Visible Defects in Oil Tank Installations,
Tanks, and Heating Oil Piping.
© Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.
OIL TANK SUPPORT and Oil Tank Protection Inspection
Are the tank support legs sound and on firm footing? If required by local ordnance, is other tank support in place? A standard 275-gallon tank with an
average capacity of 260 gallons weighs about 2000 lbs. Placed on wood or dirt the tank is likely to tip and spill.
The photo shows a seriously tipping oil tank support pier, risking tipping of the tank, oil spillage,
loss of heat (risking frozen pipes and water or mold damage) and environmental contamination. [Photo courtesy Arlene Puentes, Kingston NY.]
Regardless of whether an oil tank is installed indoors or outdoors above ground, it must be properly supported.
Some municipalities also require installation
of special protection to assure that a tank cannot tip over, even if its feet are damaged. A steel pipe may be installed in the floor next to the
tank and extended vertically above the tank and then after making a 90 deg. bend, secured to the wall to "cage" the oil tank. |
What about rusty oil tank feet? The rust shown in this photo is trivial in that it has not caused enough damage that we have any
concern that the tank is going to tip over - at least not in the near future.
But rust on oil tank supporting feet for an indoor
oil storage tank, especially on those back feet close to the wall, hard to reach, and hard to re-paint, are a great indicator of
the history of water entry in a building. |
Oil Tank Protection From Vehicles
Where oil tanks are installed in garages, some jurisdictions require that the garage oil tank (and boiler or furnace if one is present) also be
protected from being struck by a vehicle using similar iron pipe guards as just cited above.
Use links just below or at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.
Above Ground Oil Tanks Inspection Checklist, an Oil Company's advice
If you scrolled down to this point please
continue reading by using ABANDONED INDOORS link at left or
use this link to go the the
"abandoned oil tank found indoors" discussion page. There you will read about the problems with above ground outdoor oil storage tanks
and what causes them and how to reduce them.
Technical Reviewers & References
Particular thanks are due to experts and also consumers who read these articles and suggest corrections, changes, and additions to
the material. Content suggestions, technical corrections and content critique are invited for any of the content at our website.
- Daniel Friedman - principal author/editor of the InspectAPedia TM Website
- Arlene Puentes, an ASHI member and a licensed home inspector in Kingston, NY, and has served on ASHI national committees as well as HVASHI Chapter President. Ms. Puentes can be contacted at ap@octoberhome.com
- Technical reviewers are invited to comment or ask questions - contact us
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OIL TANK HOME
OIL TANK LIFE
LEAK CAUSES
LEAK TESTING
WATER in OIL TANKS
TESTING COs
REMOVAL COs
LEAK CLEANUP
BURIED OIL TANK ADVICE
BURIED TANKS, FIND
FLOATING UP TANKS
FUEL OIL TYPES & CHARACTERISTICS
SLUDGE IN OIL TANKS
TANK ABANDONING
TANK FAILURE CAUSES
TANK FAILURE RATES
TANK LEGAL ISSUES
TANK LEAK ADVICE
TANK LIFE
TANK REMOVAL COs
TANK REMOVAL FINANCIAL AID
TANK REGULATIONS
TANK INSPECTION REPORTS
TANK SLUDGE
TANK STANDARDS
TANK TESTING
TANK TESTING COs
WATER in OIL TANKS
More Information
InspectAPedia ® Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
InspectAPedia Bookstore
Electrical
Environment Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
Plumbing Water Septic
Roofing
Structure
Accuracy & Bias Pledge
Contact Us
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More Information: Buried and Above Ground Oil Storage Tanks References & More Information on USTs
- Oil Tanks - The Oil Storage Tank Information Website: Buried or Above Ground Oil Tank Inspection, Testing, Cleanup, Abandonment of Oil Tanks
- Abandon a Buried Oil Tank, How To - Abandoning Commercial Underground Tanks, Russ Brauksieck, ASHI Tech. Journal, Vol.3 No.1 Spring 1993, P. 40-41 [Reprint]
- Above Ground Oil Tanks: Visual Inspection of Oil Storage Tanks for evidence of leaks, damage, improper piping - photos and text
- Above Ground Oil Tanks Checklist, an Oil Company's advice
- Above Ground Tanks UL Standards, UL Tank Listing Standards, guidance for home owners, buyers, and inspectors
- Buried Oil Tanks - Finding How to Find Buried Oil Tanks and "Nearly Hidden" and Leaky Oil Tanks - photos and text.
- Buried Fuel tank - Advice - Buried FUEL Tank - GAS or OIL advice for home buyers, inspection report language
- Environmental Issues & Regulations for Oil Tanks, Registration, Abandonment, Leak Reporting
Home Inspection Report Language Library: Buried Oil Tanks, Basic home buyer advice - home inspection report language suggestions
Home Inspection Report Language Library: Visible Defects in Oil Tank Installations, Tanks, and Heating Oil Piping
Home Inspection Report Language Library: Gas Fuel Piping or Tank Faults Basic advice - home inspection report language suggestions
- Home Inspection Report Language Library: Oil Tanks text file list © Oil and Other Storage Tank Leaks, Testing, Abandonment, Inspection - UST home inspection report language files - Reference List
- Indoor Environment Website Indoor Building Environmental Hazard Detection, Testing, Repair, & Prevention - Main Web Page
- Leaky Heating Oil Tanks - Advice for Home Owners or Buyers: caused of leaks in oil tanks, oil tank testing alternatives, what to do about leaky tanks: D.J. Friedman, ASHI Tech. Journal, Vol.2 No.1, Winter, 1992 p. 42-43 Illus
- Leak or Failure Rates for Home Heating Oil Tanks
- Legal Issues Regarding Buried Oil Storage Tanks K.S. Rea, Attorney, summary from ASHI Chapter Seminar.
- Primer on Petroleum Bulk Storage Tanks & Petroleum Contamination of Property Paul H. Ciminello, ASHI Tech. Journal, Vol.3 No.1 Spring 1993, p 35-39
- Petroleum Bulk Storage J. Sibblies, NY State DEC, Advice to Home Owners and Home Inspectors about Oil Storage Tanks - summary from ASHI Chapter Seminar.
- Septic Tank inspection, testing, diagnosis, repair
- TANK FAILURE CAUSES - Oil Tank Failure Causes - oil tank leaks are caused by corrosion, damage, soil conditions, other factors
- TANK FAILURE RATES - Oil Tank Failure Rates - Oil Tank Leak Probability as a Function of Tank Age, Location, Condition, Soil Conditions and Other Factors
- TANK TESTING - - How Oil Tanks are Tested for Evidence Leaks, of Current or Previous Oil Spills
- National Association of Oil Heat Service Managers, PO Box 380, Elmwood Park, NJ 07407
- "Homeowners Guide to Fuel Storage," Agway Energy Products, Verbank, NY, November 1990
- Web Link Exchange: Contact Us to list your website or contact information for oil tank testing, tank corrosion research, oil industry experts
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