J
jdvorchak
Guest
Let me start by saying I hate to clean rusty, varnished up fuel tanks. Of all that I do to these bikes I hate cleaning rusty tanks. I'm no good at it and while I get them clean I hate doing it. Did I mention that I don't like to clean tanks?
I bought a couple of 850 in December and one the tank looked like new inside. This one? Pretty much looked like an old sewer pipe.

Since I had plenty of time, over the winter months, I just filled it with Diesel Fuel and left it. I was hoping that would break up the varnish and melt it away. That didn't happen. So I poured the diesel into my parts cleaner. It works good in there. So I filled it up with gasoline and let it sit a couple of weeks. Actually that did a better job of melting the varnish. Well I'm done with the engine/carb/electrical work so I forced myself to work on that tank. Drained the gasoline out into the parts washer. Couldn't hurt and I keep the lid closed on the parts cleaner when not in use. Plenty of nasty looking stuff came out. I then threw a handful of nuts and bolts in there and one gallon of plain white vinegar. Shook it up as long as my old arms could shake it over a couple of days. Put two more gallons of vinegar in there and shook and rotated how it sat. Well long story short I drained the vinegar and fished out the nuts and bolts with a magnet on a stick and flushed it numerous times with my garden hose. Kept that up for a while until I didn't see anything but water coming out and it looked clean. Dried it with my shop vac and poking a towel in there on a stick.
So my advice is to never buy a bike with a rusty tank but if you do vinegar and nuts and bolts will clean one. Just takes a couple of days of soaking.

I bought a couple of 850 in December and one the tank looked like new inside. This one? Pretty much looked like an old sewer pipe.

Since I had plenty of time, over the winter months, I just filled it with Diesel Fuel and left it. I was hoping that would break up the varnish and melt it away. That didn't happen. So I poured the diesel into my parts cleaner. It works good in there. So I filled it up with gasoline and let it sit a couple of weeks. Actually that did a better job of melting the varnish. Well I'm done with the engine/carb/electrical work so I forced myself to work on that tank. Drained the gasoline out into the parts washer. Couldn't hurt and I keep the lid closed on the parts cleaner when not in use. Plenty of nasty looking stuff came out. I then threw a handful of nuts and bolts in there and one gallon of plain white vinegar. Shook it up as long as my old arms could shake it over a couple of days. Put two more gallons of vinegar in there and shook and rotated how it sat. Well long story short I drained the vinegar and fished out the nuts and bolts with a magnet on a stick and flushed it numerous times with my garden hose. Kept that up for a while until I didn't see anything but water coming out and it looked clean. Dried it with my shop vac and poking a towel in there on a stick.
So my advice is to never buy a bike with a rusty tank but if you do vinegar and nuts and bolts will clean one. Just takes a couple of days of soaking.




