The tank most certainly has a vent line. When adding water to the tank via the deck mounted water fill fitting, the general practice is the continue adding water until some water starts to gush out of the hull mounted vent fitting. Simply adding water until the gauge reads full does not, for my boat, come near to filling the tank.
The water line from the city water connection has a check valve installed. When water, or air, pressure is applied to the city water connection, the check valve prevents the water or air from back flowing into the tank and out the vent. So if using the air blow technique of winterizing, there is no need to tape over the vent. However, air blowing will not protect the tank or water line up to and including the water pump i.e. from the check valve back to the tank. Further, from my RVing days, my experience is that the air blowing leaves some water in the low sections of the lines. After the lines are partially empty, the air tends to flow through the lines above the water. You need quite a strong air flow to completely clear the lines and 20 psi does produce the required flow. My view is that for full protection, RV antifreeze is required. However, once one has used antifreeze to clear water from the system, water tank forward, what is the point of leaving antifreeze in the system over the winter? Next spring a lot of flushing is needed to get rid of the taste that has permeated the lines and all. What I do is immediately after flushing with antifreeze, I use the water pump to pump as much antifreeze out of the system as possible. I then apply air pressure via the city water connection and blow out most of the residual antifreeze, check valve forward.A way to keep the required volume of antifreeze to a minimum, I have installed bypass valves to the water heater tanks, inlet and outlet lines. Use of these valves prior to adding antifreeze, isolates the tank from the rest of the system. With this isolation I find that 2 gallons added to the water tank is sufficient. The tank is easy drained and cleared of water so no antifreeze id needed here. Actually I use air to blow out the tank. Care needs to be taken that the hot lines, exclusive of the tank, are not isolated.