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  • #16
    If the vinegar doesn't get all the rust out Evaporust will.

    It's a bit costly about $26.00 a gal. 'round here at HF but with the 20 % off coupon a little better.
    I bought enough for my Standard tank which was barely flashed and reused it for 3 more badly rusted tanks with great results. It's a bit old and dirty now but I'll throw a rusty tool or small part in and leave it till I remember to check on it and it still has some life after a few years.
    If I need to derust another tank I will purchase another supply of Evaporust.

    dolphans1, your tank is not bad enough to need a liner, hope the vinegar works.
    I'm anxious to see the results.
    Last edited by Schming; 02-17-2018, 09:48 AM.
    1980 XS1100G "Dolly G" Full Dresser (with a coat of many colors )
    1979 XS1100SF (stock-euro mods planned)
    1984 XV700L Virago (to be hot-modded)
    1983 XJ750MK Midnight Maxim (semi-restored DD)
    1977 XS650D ( patiently awaiting resto)

    Sometimes it takes a whole tank of gas before you can think straight.

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    • #17
      If the tank is rusty or already acid treated, there is no reason to spend money on Evaporust or Metal Rescue. Acid will do the job if you're careful. Two cups of phosphoric acid diluted in four gallons of water should leave bare metal in six to eight hours depending upon how bad it is. Acid (even vinegar) will eat good metal, too. So, don't go to sleep on the job.

      Afterwards, one cup of baking soda dissolved in a tank full of water will neutralize it. Otherwise, it keeps eating. Follow will liner of choice. I recommend Caswell.

      Metal Rescue or Evaporust is the best choice if you have a small spot or two and you don't want to damage the original liner. Either will derust the entire tank, but as stated, they are around $25 per gallon.
      Marty (in Mississippi)
      XS1100SG
      XS650SK
      XS650SH
      XS650G
      XS6502F
      XS650E

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      • #18
        Originally posted by jetmechmarty View Post
        If you acid etched your tank with vinegar, it will quickly rust again, or you may install a liner.

        Yes, a liner will fail if not properly installed. I favor the Caswell epoxy liner. That one is most forgiving and won't fail if done properly. Mess it up and your tank is junk as no solvent will dissolve that epoxy AFAIK.
        My tank was like a new tank inside before I ran water through it to clean it. It’s obviously a steel tank inside. I plan to air dry once I drain tank of vinegar and rerinse with water. I’m going to air dry, fill with acetone and then oil fog it and seal the filler opening with tape while tank is repainted.

        I will report back in stages.

        I was going to go with evapo rust or the other brand but I could not find it at Home Depot.

        What I caused was flash rust because I allowed moisture into a steel tank.

        If I could do it all over again, I would have flushed tank with mineral spirits.
        79 SF

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        • #19
          I Like Evaporust Better

          I had great experience with Evaporust in a few previous gas tanks.

          Recently, I needed to de-rust another gas tank. I could not find Evaporust at Home Depot, nor the local hardware stores, nor the auto parts stores.

          So I bought Metal Rescue. It worked on the submerged parts of the tank, but new rust formed on the parts of the tank that were not submerged.

          I looked harder and found Evaporust at Tractor Supply and the rest of the job went better.
          Last edited by Radioguylogs; 02-18-2018, 12:10 AM.
          -Mike
          _________
          '79 XS1100SF 20k miles
          '80 XS1100SG 44k miles
          '81 XS1100H Venturer 35k miles
          '79 XS750SF 17k miles
          '85 Honda V65 Magna ~7k miles
          '84 Honda V65 Magna 48k miles (parts bike)
          '86 Yamaha VMAX 9k miles

          Previous: '68 Motoguzzi 600cc + '79 XS750SF 22k miles +'84 Honda V65

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          • #20
            5 gallon evapo-rust

            About 2 years ago I picked up a 5 gallon can of evapo-rust at Tractor Supply for $80. Amazon has it on sale right now for $81 with free shipping. Yes, a bit pricey if you're only cleaning one tank, but So far I have cleaned 4 tanks, re-using the same 5 gallons! Not too bad!
            Last edited by Ranger_xs1100; 02-18-2018, 06:57 AM.
            Bob's Bikes:
            79SF, Military theme bike

            Bob's websites:
            https://projectxs11.wordpress.com
            https://rucksackgrunt.com

            Bob's Books:
            "
            Project XS11"
            "Rucksack Grunt"
            "Jean's Heroic Journey"


            Bob's Parts:
            For Sale Here.

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            • #21
              US Bike Tank Capacity
              Specials - 4 gal
              Standards - 5 gal
              Venturer - 6 gal

              Depending on whose book you are reading, you will see numbers like 3.9 gal, 5.1 gal, etc.

              I was told by a UK member that all of the UK Standards had the 6 gal tank.
              It wasn't just the UK ones, mate. It was only the American market where the Standards came with the little 20 litre tanks, no oil coolers and the cruiser style riding position with the forward mounted footpegs. All the other markets had the big tanks all years and the more sporty riding position.

              As for the capacity of the various tanks, try using metric measurements, at they are standard worldwide as opposed to gallons which for some reason are smaller in the US and Germany.
              15 litres for the Specials and Sports,
              20 litres for the US Standard,
              24 litres for the rest of the Standards + the US Venturer
              Last edited by Eveready1100; 02-20-2018, 04:41 AM.
              79 SF Special W/ Stock all original motor @ 384,000klms
              Stock exhaust, stock airbox, XJ sump, 78E carbs, Xs1100RH seat, Bosch superhorns, 5/8ths front M/c, braided lines, sintered SBS pads, drilled discs, progressive springs, 8" 50w HID headlight 4300K, 2 x 50w HID spiral driving lights, KONI shocks, Spade fuse box
              *Touring mode - Plexistar 2 screen, Gearsack rack & bag & saddlebags, homebuilt towbar
              *"The Keg"- UC torana hubs, XS11 discs, Tokico 4 spot calipers

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Eveready1100 View Post
                It wasn't just the UK ones, mate. It was only the American market where the Standards came with the little 20 litre tanks, no oil coolers and the cruiser style riding position with the forward mounted footpegs. All the other markets had the big tanks all years and the more sporty riding position.

                As for the capacity of the various tanks, try using metric measurements, at they are standard worldwide as opposed to gallons which for some reason are smaller in the US and Germany.
                15 litres for the Specials and Sports,
                20 litres for the US Standard,
                24 litres for the rest of the Standards + the US Venturer
                Good to know. Quite interesting that Yamaha used the smaller tanks only in the U.S. I'm sure they had a reason for that. Can't imagine what it was. If I had to guess, I would think that some US government regulation had something to do with it.

                Are the bigger Standard tanks readily available in your neck of the woods?
                1981 XS1100H Venturer
                K&N Air Filter
                ACCT
                Custom Paint by Deitz
                Geezer Rectifier/Regulator
                Chacal Stainless Steel Braided Brake Lines
                Chrome Front Rotor & Caliper Covers
                Stebel Nautilus Horn
                EBC Front Rotors
                Limie Accent Moves On In 2015

                Mike

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                • #23
                  I wouldn't say they're just laying around everywhere due to their vintage, but they'd be as common here as the smaller ones are in the States. I've got one on my SF, and another 2 in my garage, along with both the original 15 litre one and one of your 20 litre ones that came off an import bike. My mate Steptoe has at least 7 in his workshop ATM.
                  BTW, Specials look great with a big tank on -

                  [IMG][/IMG]
                  79 SF Special W/ Stock all original motor @ 384,000klms
                  Stock exhaust, stock airbox, XJ sump, 78E carbs, Xs1100RH seat, Bosch superhorns, 5/8ths front M/c, braided lines, sintered SBS pads, drilled discs, progressive springs, 8" 50w HID headlight 4300K, 2 x 50w HID spiral driving lights, KONI shocks, Spade fuse box
                  *Touring mode - Plexistar 2 screen, Gearsack rack & bag & saddlebags, homebuilt towbar
                  *"The Keg"- UC torana hubs, XS11 discs, Tokico 4 spot calipers

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Definitely a very nice looking bike with improvements Eveready1100! A nice fork brace would 'icing on the cake' so to speak, and GREATLY improve handling!
                    Last edited by motoman; 02-21-2018, 06:10 PM.
                    81H Venturer1100 "The Bentley" (on steroids) 97 Yamaha YZ250(age reducer) 92 Honda ST1100 "Twisty"(touring rocket) Age is relative to the number of seconds counted 'airing' out an 85ft. table-top.

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                    • #25
                      Originally posted by Eveready1100 View Post
                      I wouldn't say they're just laying around everywhere due to their vintage, but they'd be as common here as the smaller ones are in the States. I've got one on my SF, and another 2 in my garage, along with both the original 15 litre one and one of your 20 litre ones that came off an import bike. My mate Steptoe has at least 7 in his workshop ATM.
                      BTW, Specials look great with a big tank on -

                      [IMG][/IMG]
                      Nice Bike, do you really have that many miles on it with no engine rebuild?
                      79 SF

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                      • #26
                        Continued saga of my xs 1100 special tank

                        Nothing is ever easy, is it?

                        Well here is my promised follow through on my tank, and though I thought my tank looked like new for all these years (39 years to be exact), because my gas in it was always clear when looking into the top of it, apparently it had some rust flakes into as you can see in this picture of a 5 gallon white bucket.

                        The Apple Cider Vinegar worked great.

                        When I dumped it out, I rinsed out with water again and then dried the tank out with a heat gun, but noticed as soon as I did, I started to get that orange flashing hue all over again.

                        I put a quart of acetone in it, sloshed it all around and drained the tank. The acetone came out semi orange.

                        I then sprayed the inside of tank with stab-bil oil fog and ran a log t-shirt through it about 20 times and removed the fuel sending unit and ran a t-shirt through the sides as far as I could go with a long screw driver and a coat hanger.

                        I resprayed sta-bil oil fog into the tank and taped up the fueling hole and the sending unit hole.

                        After the tank is painted I am going to flush the tank with gasoline.

                        Last edited by dolphans1; 02-21-2018, 06:39 PM.
                        79 SF

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                        • #27
                          79 SF

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                          • #28
                            Again, aint nothing easy, even taking a photo is hard when you don't have enough light, but here it is.

                            79 SF

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                            • #29
                              79 SF

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                              • #30
                                79 SF

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