Though the outside of the tank is nicely ding and dent free with light scratching on the paint (tank is going to be repainted, no worries), the inside of the tank was a disaster.. heavy rust and an ancient failed tank liner treatment that made it a royal pain in the assets to get it cleaned out.
Looking at the inside of the tank, I can see thick crusty rust covering everything, right up to the filler neck.. the gas cap was very difficult to remove let alone turn the key. I was able to finally remove it, clean it out, used a nylon rotary wire wheel to remove the clumps of rust from the innards and soak everything in Evapo-Rust until it was all bright and shiny.. The chrome cover on the cap buffed up nicely.. almost too nice to put back on the tank.. Ok that job is done, key operates the pawls nicely and I can actually insert and remove the key without junk covering the key..
The Petcock was encrusted with a lot of weird shyte.. some of it brittle, some of it like a red silicone caulk material.. so badly rusted there's no point of salvaging it.. Its been strongly recomended to get a new one instead of wasting money on a rebuild kit as apparently they don't always work properly.. tossed it away.
Getting the fluid out of the tank was a pain.. no petcock drain so off goes the petcock and drain it through the hole.. which clogged up with that reddish gloop material.. and stink? enough to knock the proverbial buzzard off a **** wagon at 50 yards.. Picked a bad day to do this in the garage as it was howling high winds and bitter cold outside but had to open the doors to vent out the stench.. wow, really? wtf?
Once the majority of the fluid was removed, I removed the fuel sender.. and again.. wow, really? The photo shows what it looked like after chipping off some of the crusty junk off of it.. rust, gloop and what must be a dead squirrel wrapped around it.. I decided to forego the fuel sender and cut it off the blanking plate.. (no fuel gauge? no problems, don't have one on the other bike either, can live without it).. Now that the tank is open and can see inside a little more, it was a distaster inside..
Tossed in some acetone and swished it around and nothing.. hmm came out a little pink.. I used tuct tape to seal the holes after tossing in broken safety glass inside and tumbled the tank in the dryer for a couple of hours.. now stuff started to loosen off inside. A lot of the rust chunks came off.. The stuff looked similar to pumice rocks.. broke apart reasonably easy. Once the tank was cleaned out and all the glass / debris removed, a close inspection showed what the problem was and why this was more difficult than it should have been to clean out..
(I used the red tuct tape as it glues down nice for a good seal and comes off easily, and turned out to be rather resistant to acetone for the period of time I used it)
The failed tank liner trapped rust underneath it, but remained flexible enough to defeat the glass.. but the glass got the crusted rust off the liner now exposing it to the acetone that I then sloshed in afterwards. Now the liner was coming apart and dissolving properly.. It took several good sloshings with fresh acetone to get the stuff out until the acetone came out lightly pink.. it wouldn't come out completely clean so I guess 'good enough'.. already went through a gallon of acetone thus far.. (photo of red fluid in bowl is how it came out after the 3rd sloshing..) Is the red colour indicative of a particular product?
Then into the wash basin and rinsed out with scalding hot water until the water flowed out clear.. a drain trap caught a lot of rolled up red caulk like material that poured out of the tank.. Once the hot water came out clean (tank hot to handle!) I swished it out with 90% rubbing alcohol to chase the rest of the water out.. a shop vac aided with the rest of the drying process..
And the inside turned out clean bare metal, no flash rusting.. Resealed the openings with tuct tape and poured in a couple of bottles of Evapo-Rust, periodically rolling the tank to catch any rust in the nooks and crannies, and what ever I couldn't wire wheel off under the filler neck..
And there she sits until the Caswell kit comes in this week.. drain the Evapo-Rust, rinse with 90% rubbing alcohol, dry it out and away we go.. At least THAT part should be relatively straight forward.. ish?
Photos:
I couldn't get a camera angle to the show the worse of it..
Fuel sender unit after knocking off big chunks of pumice rock like material..
Acetone after 3rd sloshing of the tank to clean out ancient failed tank liner..
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