Reuse underground oil tank as rainwater cistern?
Last Post 05 Oct 2009 02:29 PM by vintovka. 6 Replies.
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MehdronUser is Offline
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10 Jul 2008 01:50 AM

As part of our basement remodel we will be replacing our oil furnace with a gas furnace.  I would love to be able to reuse our underground heating oil tank as a rainwater cistern.  I would use the collected water in the yard/garden during the summer.

Normal decomissioning of a tank (if left in place and not filled with foam or concrete) is to "triple rinse" it, through the fill tube.  This would obviously not be sufficient decontamination for my purpose.

I am thinking that we would need to cut into the top of the tank and get someone inside it to scrub it down thoroughly with detergent, to get all residue out.  If this is insufficient, perhaps an epoxy coating. 

The various local oil tank decomissioning contractors I have spoken with are not up for this project.  Too weird for them.

Does anyone have any words of encouragement/discouragment as to the practicality of this project, and how to find someone to do the work?

Thanks!

wlc_girlUser is Offline
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08 Aug 2009 08:27 AM
I think this is a FANTASTIC idea.. at the very least, you could remove the old tank and replace it with a water-holding tank! I'm trying to determine if I can do that with an old, out-of-commission Cistern in my back yard. When I started talking to people about re-using my cistern (or the space it takes up), I had the same "too weird" response. Please let me know if managed to get any good ideas on this.
jimmUser is Offline
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08 Aug 2009 12:19 PM
The chances of residue coming from this tank for a long time are very high thats why no one wants to try to use this as a cisterne for you . if you want a cistern you are better off installing a new palstic tank and not taking a chance on the enviromental concern of a old oil tank
James EggertUser is Offline
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09 Aug 2009 10:26 AM
By the time you spend the money to "clean" the tank, you would be better off having it removed and a fiberglass one placed back in the same hole.

I'm guessing you have a metal tank, which is always tricky to cut into because of oil residue AND fumes.
Take Care<br>Jim<br><br>Design/Build/Consulting<br>"Not So Big" Design Proponent
aardvarcusUser is Offline
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11 Aug 2009 07:01 PM
As the last two people told you, it is cheaper/better/safer, just decommission the old and buy a new tank.
Bill55AZUser is Offline
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12 Aug 2009 12:29 PM
wic_girl, if your cistern was just used for water, you could at least use it to water your lawn. How much rain do you get there? and can you get it into and out of the tank easy?
vintovkaUser is Offline
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05 Oct 2009 02:29 PM
If you were in CA even alluding to having an underground fuel tank would cause 3-4 agencies to descend on you and could cause financial stress beyond the value of your property. Here you are required to report tanks especially on disclosure forms when you sell. CA regulatory is spreading so heads up. FWIW if the tank has leaked (most have) the contaminants may affect some plastics and leach into the tank contents.
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