Protecting oil tank from falling trees

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Mark A

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Hi chaps,

Our house is in a valley with tall trees up either side. The weekend before last a tree came down in high winds, blocking the farmer's lane running along the boundary and crushing a section of hedge. Fortunately, this particular tree was about 40 yards away from our heating oil tank, but next time we may not be so lucky.

A local steel fabricator is popping round tomorrow to take a look, but I'd like a bit of advice beforehand.

I am envisioning four steel columns bolted to concrete footings, supporting beams on top. I may fix a sheet of corrugated steel on top at a later date.

Would bolts be adequate to join the components together, or would welding be best?

With regards to attaching the columns to the footings; should studs be set into the concrete while it is being poured, or can studs be adhered in place with chemical fasteners after the concrete has cured?

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Cheers,
Mark
 
talk with your supplier first, you may find they won't fill a tank that's been surrounded like that. I could be wrong obviously, but it doesn't hurt to ask.
 
I contacted our supplier when we first considered moving the tank to it's current location and they were confident their hoses could reach. Otherwise the tanker could park on the farmer's lane behind and pass the hose over.

To conform with building regs I believe there can be nothing combustible surrounding the tank (the hedge behind is a safe distance away).

Although the tank's base is strong, I still wouldn't like to fix a steel frame to it - if a tree came down and the frame shifted it could potentially compromise the concrete base.



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novocaine":nmb7dyna said:
talk with your supplier first, you may find they won't fill a tank that's been surrounded like that. I could be wrong obviously, but it doesn't hurt to ask.
Hi,

I just contacted a local oil supplier to confirm how much clearance they would need above a tank for filling (and to conform to any regulations) and apparently there are no hard and fast rules - as long as the lid can be opened we are okay.

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There would be a lot of energy in a falling tree, especially one falling from up the bank above. Not sure how you'd work out the potential forces involved and what size of frame you'd need to adequately take the impact from one. If the tree impacts the frame and snaps at the point of impact you could still end up with the main bulk of the tree going down behind the frame and impacting the rear of the tank. I'd be tempted to consider an A frame behind the tank to deflect the tree to one side. Looks fraught with difficulties to build something you could hand on heart think will save the tank.

Hard to tell from the photos but looks like only one of the trees is actually close enough to impact the tank with the main trunk. If so get that one felled and then you're only worried about the crown of the tree impacting, which would be a much more dispersed force.

Sorry if none of that is actually very helpful but my brain start's to fizzle on these kinds of problems and have to get it out or it'll set me off.

Fitz.
 
I was thinking it would be easier to shorten the offending trees too, but I am sure you have already thought of that and there is a reason you can't.
 
Fitzroy":cidrbc13 said:
There would be a lot of energy in a falling tree, especially one falling from up the bank above. Not sure how you'd work out the potential forces involved and what size of frame you'd need to adequately take the impact from one. If the tree impacts the frame and snaps at the point of impact you could still end up with the main bulk of the tree going down behind the frame and impacting the rear of the tank. I'd be tempted to consider an A frame behind the tank to deflect the tree to one side. Looks fraught with difficulties to build something you could hand on heart think will save the tank.

Hard to tell from the photos but looks like only one of the trees is actually close enough to impact the tank with the main trunk. If so get that one felled and then you're only worried about the crown of the tree impacting, which would be a much more dispersed force.

Sorry if none of that is actually very helpful but my brain start's to fizzle on these kinds of problems and have to get it out or it'll set me off.

Fitz.

Hi,

You may be onto something there.

The woodland behind is owned by the local farmer and after the tree came down he mentioned he will have to fell some more further down his lane. I could approach him with an offer to share costs, though farmers tend to work to a different time scale to the rest of us - when they say soon they could mean now, or in five years time!

Here's another picture of the tank from further down the hill:
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And some more from a good vantage point:
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bb6fe1d372cb19b214dabac20cdd55d0.jpg


And another:
d9e666d879ab72a8d0afc384c96bf6e6.jpg


And some from the farmer's lane:

820b8808a08072bd7bc73de70abfc2e7.jpg


8b808b949337cc4b8a6e5b9962377efa.jpg


The nearest tree is small enough to not pose a threat to a good solid frame; though I'm more worried about the trees further up the hill. Two in particular are concerning as they have become entwined, and if they were to give they could potentially bring down one or both of the trees in front.

Mark
 
If the trees belong to the farmer, it's in his interests to take out the tops.
Otherwise he is going to get a big bill if they fall onto your property and onto that tank.
Unless the trees were mine I would not be paying for any work to prevent the accident but I would point out to the owner this risk to his bank balance of doing nothing.
 
You might be better with a below ground tank rather than trying to sort out steel and foundations to protect the tank you have at the moment.
 
Lurker - I don't know if I could, even if I wanted to. Things work a bit differently here and if we, as people new to the area (been in and around Gower for nine years this November, but just over 13 months in this house) start "exercising our rights" it wouldn't go down well. Besides, it was our decision to move the tank to its current location - the old tank was a single-skin monstrosity placed in front of a window under the garage's eaves an next to a drain which connects directly to a stream.

Jimmy - I'm sorry, but no chance! We bought the tank in the pictures from Gumtree for a bargain price, but it had one caveat - the owners had 800l of oil delivered literally days before selling the tank and it took a lot of buggering about to sort out.
 
Would an A-frame, or pyramid-style structure, be better to deflect a falling trunk rather than trying to have a horizontal structure take the impact?
 
Really think you'd be best talking nicely to the farmer, even Welsh farmers can be reasonable (I can say that, coming from a Welsh farming family!). Especially if you offer to share costs or even pay entirely for removing the trees that might be a danger!
No need to get all heavy and legalistic about it; say to the guy that you are worried about your tank after seeing what the one that fell did, and would he be happy to have the threatening ones felled, or shortened.
Any structure that is guaranteed to catch a falling tree will cost a bomb, and as others have said, there's no certainty it'd work anyway. A good tree surgeon won't cost nearly as much.
 
I've taken on board what you all have said regarding the trees, and ideally, removing the problem at source will certainly be better than trying to protect the tank.

The fabricator is due tomorrow so I'll listen to what he says, then make a decision from there.

Out of interest, can anyone give examples of what tree surgeons charge, based on work you've had done? Obviously, every job is different, but since we've never needed their services I begin couldn't fathom a guess.

Cheers,
Mark

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A few years ago I paid 500 quid for a couple of days work for two men to remove huge limbs from a 60 foot weeping willow.
 
RogerP":ew0duc46 said:
A few years ago I paid 500 quid for a couple of days work for two men to remove huge limbs from a 60 foot weeping willow.
Thanks, that quite encouraging.
 
Just insure the risk? It seems a tad OTT to build a frame on the off-chance that another tree might fall, and do so in your direction, and hit your tank, and wreck it.
 
Seems 500 quid is the going rate. Its what we paid to fell a very large spruce about fifteen feet from the house. Given that it had to fall in one direction only avoid house, greenhouse and sheds it was not something I was going to tackle myself with the chainsaw.
 
Depends where you are I guess. We had a tall silver birch and a large cherry tree removed, and the stumps ground out, for £280 - which I thought was pretty reasonable.
 
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