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ebinmaine

Can you all recommend something to coat the inside of small engine metal gas tanks?

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ebinmaine

Do you have a favorite product that is inexpensive and easily accessible for keeping the surface rust at Bay inside of your metal gas tanks?

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dells68

I bought a gas tank kit from POR15 to use in a VW.  It worked great and is still fine about 8 years later.

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wfrpalm

POR15 is the way to go.

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Digger 66

 

 

Used to use  KREEM on all the steel bike tanks .

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JPWH

I used POR 15 on 2 gas tanks and a hydraulic tank. A 1/2 pint will easily do 2 854 tanks.

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KC9KAS

Personally I haven't had to treat a tank, but most things I have read suggest the POR 15!

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moe1965

Red Kote. You can get it on eBay or direct from the manufacture .  

  

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Pollack Pete

POR-15 has my vote.Been using their paints and coatings for years with nothing but excellent results.Pricey,but you get what you pay for.

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Jerry77

I used the kits you get from Eastwood....used them on old cars that I restored....worked good and lasted..:)

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Pinball

Red Kote all the way.  I have used it on a lot of motorcycle tanks and had NO problems at all.  The nice thing is you can buy it at O'Reilly's Auto Parts.  If you were to mess it up Red Kote can be removed as for POR-15 and Kreem I don't believe you can. My 2 cents.

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JERSEYHAWG /  Glenn

POR 15, my 2 cents.

 

Glenn.      :handgestures-thumbupright:

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pfrederi

Eastwood kit Did teh tank on my 1953 M-37 abut 20 years ago.  still have clean gas.  Also did the tank on my Case VAC tractor (1951) about 12 years ago.  She had some seepage.  Eastwood treatment  stopped it and has held just fine ever since.  Still looks nice inside.

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ebinmaine

Thank you folks for all your responses. I had a busy day yesterday and haven't had time to look much but it seems lots of people prefer por-15.

One question Pops to mind this morning.

Are any or all of these products a lighter color so you can look in the tank and see how much gas is in there? None of mine have fuel gauges...

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pfrederi

Eastwood is an off white

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oliver2-44

Red Glyptal Insulating Enamel Paint also works well if you have access to it. We have a lot of old oil reservoirs coated with it at work. Been on there for many many yearly 

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richmondred01

POR15

or Bill Hirsh sell some very good products. I’ve used his stuff in several of my vintage cars and farmalls.

clean the tank. I put several small rocks in the tank (count them as you are putting them in....ask me why)

The shake the tank with the rocks which will remove the scale. Blow it out with air and repeat several times.

rinse well with water and let it dry for several days.

when it’s dry use the aforementioned products.

All the best....

 

Edited by richmondred01
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ebinmaine
3 minutes ago, richmondred01 said:

. I put several small rocks in the tank (count them as you are putting them in....ask me why)

HAHAHAHA! 

Boy does that sound like something I would do. Leave a rock in a gas tank.

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Tankman
5 minutes ago, ebinmaine said:

HAHAHAHA! 

Boy does that sound like something I would do. Leave a rock in a gas tank.

Wouldn't the missing 'rolling stone' keep the fuel mixed?  :ROTF:

'Specially a two-cycle fuel mix?

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ebinmaine
2 minutes ago, Tankman said:

Wouldn't the missing 'rolling stone' keep the fuel mixed?  :ROTF:

'Specially a two-cycle fuel mix?

Hey now! You may be onto something there...

 

My whole property is filled with stones of all sizes and shapes. I should Market them on the internets.... as custom measured petroleum mixers.

Edited by ebinmaine
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SylvanLakeWH

UUHHMM...   I use gas to coat the inside of my gas tanks...

 

:twocents-02cents:

 

:ychain:

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Joshn569

Check out caswell fuel tank epoxy sealer. It coats right over any rust and it ethanol safe. Ive had great succsess on motorcycle tanks both metal rusty ones and new plastic ones (the ethanol was causing plastic tanks to expand and warp and this product stopped that from happining)

:twocents-02cents:

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