So, as many of you probably don't remember, I've been trying to restore a 1980 1100. The gas tank is powerful rusty. Here's what I've tried without much success and it's result:
A couple of gallons of Evaporust flipped over after 24 hours -> Yielded a smelly liquid, rust still visible
Ball bearings -> lots of noise, most of the really loose stuff broken off, still a lot from what I could hear. There's still one in there.
Electrolysis -> I purchase a battery charger, a plastic tub from Home Depot and some washing soda and used a couple of old brake rotors as my sacrifical anodes. The charger showed 10-13 amps. Lots of crap in the tub afterward, a week of twice daily scraping of the rotors (into another container) then washing them, and still a bunch of visible rust in the tank.
Naval Jelly and chains -> someone suggested using small chains to beat up the inside of the tank to remove loose rust and the chain is heavy and easy to retrieve relative to the BBs. The chain has wrapped itself around some internal structure. I haven't checked it today, the jelly has been in there for 24 hours (without the petcocks or fuel gauge installed) so we'll see tonight.
Next will be white vinegar and salt, the HCl, then filling with concrete and pushing off of a bridge.
I've also heard about molasses that's not desulphured (needs 2 weeks at least), tea (probably also 2+ weeks) and wood cleaner.
I spoke with some radiator shops who won't do it and a bike shop who wants $300 and 3 weeks. No thanks.
Any suggestions before I lose my mind?
A couple of gallons of Evaporust flipped over after 24 hours -> Yielded a smelly liquid, rust still visible
Ball bearings -> lots of noise, most of the really loose stuff broken off, still a lot from what I could hear. There's still one in there.
Electrolysis -> I purchase a battery charger, a plastic tub from Home Depot and some washing soda and used a couple of old brake rotors as my sacrifical anodes. The charger showed 10-13 amps. Lots of crap in the tub afterward, a week of twice daily scraping of the rotors (into another container) then washing them, and still a bunch of visible rust in the tank.
Naval Jelly and chains -> someone suggested using small chains to beat up the inside of the tank to remove loose rust and the chain is heavy and easy to retrieve relative to the BBs. The chain has wrapped itself around some internal structure. I haven't checked it today, the jelly has been in there for 24 hours (without the petcocks or fuel gauge installed) so we'll see tonight.
Next will be white vinegar and salt, the HCl, then filling with concrete and pushing off of a bridge.
I've also heard about molasses that's not desulphured (needs 2 weeks at least), tea (probably also 2+ weeks) and wood cleaner.
I spoke with some radiator shops who won't do it and a bike shop who wants $300 and 3 weeks. No thanks.
Any suggestions before I lose my mind?
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