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Rusted tank
- Ojisan rider
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Yesterday, while I was mocking up the front fork, noticed inside the tank had slashing noise. Took the tank right away and turn it upside down and there was about half gallon of water in the tank. got the petcock and fuel level sender out and shook the tank some more to get rid of the water. Got almost all of it out, though.
But now, my tank have pretty good rust, along with flaking Kleem coating. It's been more than 20-years from my last experience removing the rust and coating the tank. Little search on the web have so many products out there. Here's the hard part. Because of where I live, most of the stuff I can't get. And from what I can remember, Kleem wasn't all that good.
Can anybody point me to right direction? What to use and such? I took the picture of the tank, but I don't know how to post it here now that I can't use photobucket.
82' KZ750-R1 cafe racer style. Clip-on, Rear set, Fork-Brace, Mikuni Flat-slide (forgot the size), Kerker.
84' GPz750 (basket case). everything are in pieces.
89' ZX750-H1 (ZX-7 Ninja). Resurrection project are on going with my KZ750. Everything is stock.
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- clarkster
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- Nessism
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- Ojisan rider
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I do have pressure washer, but it's electric one, and only produce about 1400 psi. I'll try washing it on my next day-off.
As for my KZ, I'm slowly collecting parts and start my rebuilt. I'd like to post pictures, but as I mentioned before, are having trouble due to photobucket thing.
Anyway, once again, thanks for the input guys.
82' KZ750-R1 cafe racer style. Clip-on, Rear set, Fork-Brace, Mikuni Flat-slide (forgot the size), Kerker.
84' GPz750 (basket case). everything are in pieces.
89' ZX750-H1 (ZX-7 Ninja). Resurrection project are on going with my KZ750. Everything is stock.
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- ThatGPzGuy
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- More Sparky than Speed Racer
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Jim
North GA
2016 Yamaha FJR1300ES
1982 GPz750 R1
1974 Kawasaki H1
1976 Kawasaki KZ400
1979 Yamaha XS650 cafe'
2001 KZ1000P
2001 Yamaha YZ426
1981 Honda XR200 stroked in an '89 CR125 chassis
1965 Mustang
1967 Triumph GT6
1976 Bronco
"If you didn't build it, it's not really yours"
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- Patton
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I used lots of acetone to dissolve and remove the Kreen coating from inside the fuel tank on my '76 LTD. Had to be very careful to keep acetone off the exterior paint finish. When the Kreem is all gone and tank has dried out, may restore pristine rust-free tank interior by filling the dry tank with lengths of chain and miscellaneous screws, nuts and bolts (use steel for later removal of small items with a telescoping pencil magnet if necessary) and securely wrapping the tank in padding such as cushions, blankets and thick towels, and then tumbling the tank inside the clothes dryer on no-heat setting for a cycle or so. Remove the tank and its contents, rinse it out with common household rubbing alcohol, allow the alcohol to dry (may blow dry if desired), spray some WD40 or marine oil-base preservative inside the tank to prevent any flash rust until filling the tank with fresh gasoline. This process should restore the tank interior to an almost as-new condition.
This procedure works equally well on other metal gasoline tanks having an interior that needs restoring, such as lawn care machines.
Good Fortune! :side:
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- Ojisan rider
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Patton wrote: Acetone dissolves Kreem.
I used lots of acetone to dissolve and remove the Kreen coating from inside the fuel tank on my '76 LTD. Had to be very careful to keep acetone off the exterior paint finish. When the Kreem is all gone and tank has dried out, may restore pristine rust-free tank interior by filling the dry tank with lengths of chain and miscellaneous screws, nuts and bolts (use steel for later removal of small items with a telescoping pencil magnet if necessary) and securely wrapping the tank in padding such as cushions, blankets and thick towels, and then tumbling the tank inside the clothes dryer on no-heat setting for a cycle or so. Remove the tank and its contents, rinse it out with common household rubbing alcohol, allow the alcohol to dry (may blow dry if desired), spray some WD40 or marine oil-base preservative inside the tank to prevent any flash rust until filling the tank with fresh gasoline. This process should restore the tank interior to an almost as-new condition.
This procedure works equally well on other metal gasoline tanks having an interior that needs restoring, such as lawn care machines.
Good Fortune! :side:
Thanks Patton. I'll definitely try your method on my next day-off. Never thought about using chain. Tank needs to be repainted anyway, so I'm not too worry about spilling the acetone. Do I need to leave it in the tank for a while? Or does it get dissolve pretty instantly?
Anyway, once I try it, I'll be sure to post the result here for other member to see/hear.
82' KZ750-R1 cafe racer style. Clip-on, Rear set, Fork-Brace, Mikuni Flat-slide (forgot the size), Kerker.
84' GPz750 (basket case). everything are in pieces.
89' ZX750-H1 (ZX-7 Ninja). Resurrection project are on going with my KZ750. Everything is stock.
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- Nessism
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For derusting the tank I like to use Kleenstrip Etch and Prep as sold by Home Depot. It's phosphoric acid and will eat off any rust inside the tank very nicely. Rinse well with water and dump in some alcohol and WD-40 to help dry the tank out so it doesn't flash rust too bad.
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- Patton
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Some have used a large pack of BB's, but non-ferrous BB's such as copper may be harder to remove because they aren't "magnetic."
The mentioned chain is meant as relatively short lengths of smaller cheap chain (not drive chain which isn't as flexible).
I used 3 gallons of acetone to almost fill the tank, which did an acceptable job of dissolving all the old Kreen. Drained all the "dirty" acetone from the petcock through a filter and used it for general clean-up purposes later when "clean" acetone wasn't required, such as wiping off greasy tools, metal parts, etc.
Good Fortune!
1973 Z1
KZ900 LTD
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- Nerdy
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Patton wrote: Some have used a large pack of BB's, but non-ferrous BB's such as copper may be harder to remove because they aren't "magnetic."
It's been a while since my BB gun days, but IIRC there were no solid copper BBs: the ones that looked like copper were merely plated, with steel under that. (The current Crosman BBs are advertised as "Premium copper-coated steel BBs".) The thin layer of copper shouldn't make much of a difference to a magnet (unless the magnet is already marginal for the purpose).
1967 Yamaha YCS1 Bonanza
1980 KZ440B
1981 Yamaha XT250H
1981 KZ440 LTD project bike
1981 GPz550
2013 Yamaha FZ6R
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- dkoz
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1978 LTD B2 smashed
1978 Z1R D1
1978 A2
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- z1kzonly
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I vote for it! I have some 1976 Harley FLH tanks to do.
I'm going to buy some.
CASWELL! They have a ton of good stuff for restorations. I have bought all my aluminum buffing supplies for years from them.
www.caswellplating.com/epoxy-gas-tank-sealer.html#
Livin in "CheektaVegas, NY
Went thru 25 of these in 40 yrs.
I SOLD OUT! THE KAW BARN IS EMPTY.
More room for The Old Girl, Harley 75 FLH Electra Glide,
Old faithful! Points ign. Bendix Orig. carb.
Starts everytime!
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