They didn't want to do that either And it's not like I didn't use a fair bit of gas - an old joke about driving behind a V8 is "pass anything but a petrol station" I think it was mostly a case of "it's not something I understand" on the part of the people I was talking to - another common "objection" being a belief that what I wanted to do was illegal since they didn't know how to deal with the correct VAT & Road Fuel Duty.Why didn't you ask one of the companies to supply a tank, and then fill it as required (which is what normally happens)?
True, but if the tank is "in test" then it's not their "problem".If it's not their tank, for the maintenance of which they were responsible, then could there be safety-related regulatory issues.
I'd expect the full inspection to involve emptying & purging the tank, strip off the fittings (valves etc), a full internal inspection, and a pressure test - so they'd just swap out the tank and ship yours back to a depot for inspection & test. In the automotive world, the tanks have a 10 year life - but after that it's cheaper to just scrap them than inspect, test, and re-certify them. From your test schedule, it looks like they are extending the full inspection periods by using ultrasonic examination - which will be to look for corrosion inside the tank (typically where a small amount of water will collect in the bottom).[/QUOTE]In addition to the visual inspections which occur every time there is a delivery (and occasional re-painting, as necessary), the major inspections for my Calor tank are already 'scheduled' for the next 26 years. The 'ultrasonic inspections' usually take a whole day - I don't know what the 30-year "thorough tank inspection" would amount to since, once my previous one hit its 30th birthday, they simply replaced it. ...