Has anyone taken a wooden tower tank apart for repair?
Posted: Thu Apr 22, 2021 2:46 am
I'm hoping to get started on my tank by the end of May so I thought I'd ask now if anyone would like to share their knowledge/experience. As you can see in my photos, The bottom has a portion that is missing and it looks to me like I'd have to take the tank apart in order to replace those boards. I don't want to simply patch or cover the bottom, I'd like to keep water in it in the summer.
So, after numbering, I'd slip the rods/clamps off, and start removing the staves on the side that needs the bottom repair. It appears that the edges of the staves are simply cut at an angle and they have a flat surface rather than a spline or some kind of tenon. I'm guessing it is that bevel, the tightened rods, and the swelling of the wet wood that keeps everything together.
Should I just remove the few staves and put them back into place after repairing the bottom, or should I disassemble the entire tank? I'm a little afraid of that path, wondering if I could get it back together....I have thought about routing/carefully chiseling the "tails" off the staves next to the missing bottom boards, then after replacing those boards, restore the tails with waterproof glued-on matching pieces. Know what I mean?
The main plan is to use the mill to pump water in a closed loop (from a stock tank, up into the tower tank, then down through the pump, back into the tank (or small clean pond) on the ground. I've been playing with a regulator on my B-702 and it would be fun as a demonstrator with the float etc.
So, after numbering, I'd slip the rods/clamps off, and start removing the staves on the side that needs the bottom repair. It appears that the edges of the staves are simply cut at an angle and they have a flat surface rather than a spline or some kind of tenon. I'm guessing it is that bevel, the tightened rods, and the swelling of the wet wood that keeps everything together.
Should I just remove the few staves and put them back into place after repairing the bottom, or should I disassemble the entire tank? I'm a little afraid of that path, wondering if I could get it back together....I have thought about routing/carefully chiseling the "tails" off the staves next to the missing bottom boards, then after replacing those boards, restore the tails with waterproof glued-on matching pieces. Know what I mean?
The main plan is to use the mill to pump water in a closed loop (from a stock tank, up into the tower tank, then down through the pump, back into the tank (or small clean pond) on the ground. I've been playing with a regulator on my B-702 and it would be fun as a demonstrator with the float etc.