Gene Blister
Member
Equipment
2019 Kubota B2601, FAL LA435, Snow Blower BX2822A, Land Pride rear blade RB1572
I’m finally giving up juggling 5gal jugs and building a fuel storage and pump station. I’ll have both diesel and gasoline.
I’m pretty much satisfied I have the 55gal steel barrels cleaned, any loose rust and debris removed and the pump, plumbing and filters properly installed.
It’s the “grounding and bonding” I’m not clear about. I know any column moving thru a constriction, like air in a wood shop vacuum pipe or fuel thru a hose, will generate static electricity. If the stuff has a low flash point, like gasoline vapor, possible boom. Bonding and grounding is the fix.
Grounding, or Earthing, apparently needs a connection between the storage vessel and the earth. I’m thinking of a jumper cable, one jaw attached to the barrel where the paint is removed for good contact, the other to a copper pipe pounded into the soil.
Bonding seems to be a connection between the vessel in which the fuel is stored and the thing into which it’s being pumped. If you’re pumping from the barrel to a smaller gas can, connect another cable to each to balance their electrical potentials.
When pumping fuel into the tractor, do I clip the bonding cable to the frame of the tractor? When pumping gasoline into our vehicles or things like the lawnmower, do I bond from barrel to the bumper or deck?
Your insight and experience is most appreciated!
I’m pretty much satisfied I have the 55gal steel barrels cleaned, any loose rust and debris removed and the pump, plumbing and filters properly installed.
It’s the “grounding and bonding” I’m not clear about. I know any column moving thru a constriction, like air in a wood shop vacuum pipe or fuel thru a hose, will generate static electricity. If the stuff has a low flash point, like gasoline vapor, possible boom. Bonding and grounding is the fix.
Grounding, or Earthing, apparently needs a connection between the storage vessel and the earth. I’m thinking of a jumper cable, one jaw attached to the barrel where the paint is removed for good contact, the other to a copper pipe pounded into the soil.
Bonding seems to be a connection between the vessel in which the fuel is stored and the thing into which it’s being pumped. If you’re pumping from the barrel to a smaller gas can, connect another cable to each to balance their electrical potentials.
When pumping fuel into the tractor, do I clip the bonding cable to the frame of the tractor? When pumping gasoline into our vehicles or things like the lawnmower, do I bond from barrel to the bumper or deck?
Your insight and experience is most appreciated!