10-foot long fuel hose and Flo N’ Go hand pump and pump holder handle
Composed of high density polyethylene for use with gas, diesel or kerosene fuels
Sturdy 6" wheels
Meets D.O.T. and UN transportation requirements
Convenient integrated handle and wheels, the DuraMAX is easily rolled anywhere to top off your tank. Built-in Flo N’ Go® nozzle and enough hose to handle nearly any dockside application. A handy hose hanger safely stores the hose and nozzle when not in use. Lay it flat for stable and safe refilling. DuraMAX has a 14-gallon capacity and is safety-certified for holding fuel. Dimensions: 34"L x 16.5"W x 12.75"D.
THIS WHOLE UNIT IS MADE CHEAP FROM THE HOSE THAT WILL KINK. TO THE WHEELS THAT \\WILL NOT SUPPORT THE WEIGHT WHEN FULL OF GAS. THE GAS VALVE LEAKED THE SECOND TIME I USED IT. I THOUGHT CABELAS TESTED WHAT THEY SOLD? BELIVE ME THIS IS ONE PEACE OF J-U-N-K.
I liked the idea of this tank for the ease of dockside fill ups and carrying 10+ gallons. The problem is filling my boat. Since the tank sits equal or slightly lower than my fill port on the boat, I have to manually and continuously pump the handle on the nozzle to keep gas flowing. This is tough on your hands and forearms after about 10 minutes. 10 gallons is exhausting and takes about 20 minutes. Not worth the effort, back to carrying the 5 gals.
Do not buy this product. You will be much happier with just plain old Gerry Jugs. I bought this "14 gallon" unit and the pump is so cheap it was broke literally within days and spewed gas from the fracture when I tried to siphon. I had just started a month long trip when I found the broken pump. I had to cut the pump off the hose and drain directly into 5 gallon jugs, then fill my pump out of the jugs. There are also 2 valves on the hose, the second inline valve was corroded by saltwater and unusable within a month. I had to leave it open and only use the first valve right off the tank (which was a huge safety hazard). The valves are garbage anyway, the handles are so small and located in an indentation in the tank, which makes them a bugger to use. The hose itself became brittle very rapidly, kinked and it spewed gas as well. The hose must have been the cheapest available. I wonder if it was even hose rated for gasoline. Last thing, I defy you to actually get 14 gallons of gas in this tank. When filled to the "safe level", it is about 12 gallons--fill it any more and it will leak when you open the vent, vertical or horizontal. Go buy 3, five gallon jugs and you'll be ahead. This is the worse purchase I have made for my vessel this year.....
The tank and wheels seem very durable. If you have to use the hand pump to empty all 14 gallons, you're going to be there a while. It takes so long that it makes the pump impractical, except for when you do not have a choice. Save your money and get one without the hand pump.