Because I just put in a permanent gas tank to replace or supplement the two 6 gallon red plastic tanks normally used on a CD 16, I looked at this issue (again). I say again because I looked at it a few years ago when Tesla stock took a big fall because one of its electric vehicles caught on fire because of a battery short. Turns out that gasoline vehicles catch on fire quite often (no surprise) and Tesla's record is actually proportionally safer than gas vehicles.
With gas stations now having video cameras, there's lots of stuff on the web. The best gas station video that I saw was a guy filling a plastic tank in the back of his pickup. Like the video already linked, there was a static spark and it caught on fire. The difference was that his baby was strapped into a car seat in the truck. Makes for an exciting video.
The info that I've found about static problems isn't straight forward, but a couple of things are universal. If you are filling up red plastic portables, take them out of the pickup bed or
out of the boat even if you are in the water and place them on the ground or the dock. That reduces the chances of them having a static charge. There has been some question as to whether placing them on a wooden dock is sufficient, but the consensus is to do it anyway. The dock burns and maybe not your boat. I've only seen people take the red plastic portables out of a boat a few time.
A permanent tank in a trailered boat is kind of the same. You need to ground the tank. But when the boat is on a trailer, a USCG marine grounding system (33 CFR 183.5720) doesn't work. That's because a grounded tank (and the grounded deck fill), are grounded to the vessel's battery, which is grounded to the motor, which is grounded to the water that it is sitting in (which is why you need to have your motor down when refilling).
But when a boat with built-in tanks is on a trailer, you don't have a ground even if your tanks are properly grounded. And you can't take the tanks out and set them on the ground. It would be possible to have a anti-static strap on your trailer (
http://www.amazon.com/Gates-90330-Stati ... B000CRBR8U), but your boat would need to be bonded to the trailer (or the anti-static strap attached to your outboard so that it touches the ground when you stop).
What I haven't seen discussed yet is whether touching the pump nozzle to the plastic tank in the back of a pickup, or to your
closed metal deck fill on your trailered boat,
prior to pumping any gas is sufficient to discharge any build up of static electricity. Get the spark out before opening the tank or pumping the first drop. It would be something that has to be remembered every time, instead of an automatic grounding system, but it seems like it should be routine, maybe even with a grounded system.
The video that was linked above is interesting. It is the spark from the tank in the truck bed that starts it all, but if you watch the whole video, there are flames coming from the vehicle's gas fill (which the driver already closed,
and from underneath the opposite side of the vehicle! I have to wonder if the driver spilled a couple gallons down the side of his truck before he even started filling the tank in the bed. It could be that when the flames started he pulled the nozzle out before shutting it off and sprayed gas all over, but there sure are a lot of flames coming from under the truck.
Quite a few of the gas station videos that I watched were women who got back into the vehicle while their gas was pumping because it was cold outside. They slid across the seat in their wool pants and walked over to the grab the nozzle. It was
them that had the static charge. So even if your tank is grounded, if you don't constantly hold the nozzle you might return with a static charge.
It seems so unlikely until it happens.
Mark