Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

All things not relating to the other forums.
Post Reply
User avatar
VinceAtReal4x4s
Admin
United States of America
Posts: 2102
Joined: Mon Apr 12, 2004 10:36 pm
Location: Ca. or lost in South West USA
Contact:

Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

Post by VinceAtReal4x4s »

Somehow I've avoided doing this on numerous trucks over the years but am facing a rusty tank issue on a big Unimog tank. I didn't think there was an issue in there but it must be hiding up the sides and/or on the ceiling of the tank because I'm getting deposits in my sediment/prefilter.

A lot of the motorcycle guys seem to like the vinegar route for removing rust. Tons of videos on that subject. I use other chemicals when I do winch and part restorations and really love the POR15 Metal Prep for etching and leaving behind a zinc-phosphate film for paint and preventing further corrosion (even on aluminum) but it would be super expensive to treat a large tank.

The 30% vinegar solution for sale at places like Lowes looks like my best option. Was wondering if anyone has done it? I was thinking of watering it down 2 or 3:1 and letting it sit for 24 hours and checking it.

The issue with that tank is its really hard to shake it around if I want to add some nuts and bolts to help dislodge any rust. How to shake or vibrate a big tank......? Maybe strap it to a cement mixer?
"For those who risk, life has a flavor the protected shall never enjoy"

Your donation makes this site possible!

Image
Heinkeljb
Great Britain
Posts: 394
Joined: Wed Feb 27, 2013 1:09 pm
Location: Lewes,Southern England

Re: Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

Post by Heinkeljb »

Buy bulk quantities of citric acid powder (Used in cooking so commercial quantities are available) and then make your own solution using water. Go the cement mixer way and throw some shingle in the tank as well. The hotter you can make the citric acid solution, the quicker it will work.

The vinegar solution will work as well, the stronger the solution, the quicker it will work along with the temperature of the solution.

Another option is to use cheap "Fizzy drink" e.g. own brand cola, or similar. They all have citric acid in them which is the active ingredient.

John
whitesik
United States of America
Posts: 255
Joined: Thu Apr 02, 2015 2:11 pm
Location: Indiana, U.S.A.

Re: Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

Post by whitesik »

Vince, have you considered a purpose made rust remover like EvapoRust? I have found it very effective on some tools but not a large tank as you describe. It works a little differently than the acids.
75 Swiss 710K
Not so new owner but still a novice
W9YG
User avatar
rmel
United States of America
Posts: 1522
Joined: Sun Sep 25, 2011 12:19 pm
Location: Woodside, CA
Contact:

Re: Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

Post by rmel »

Possibly another alternative is to bring the tank to someone who
specializes in fuel tank re-lining. I went that route when I was
rebuilding my 712 which had a bad case of Red death. They managed
to get the inside to bare metal then re-lined it. Came out nice.
Puller: 71' 710K 2.7L EFI aka Mozo
Follower: Sankey MK 3, 3/4 Tonne
Rescue Pinz: 73' 712MK

Driver: Ron // KO0Q
User avatar
VinceAtReal4x4s
Admin
United States of America
Posts: 2102
Joined: Mon Apr 12, 2004 10:36 pm
Location: Ca. or lost in South West USA
Contact:

Re: Rusty gas tank. Use Vinegar?

Post by VinceAtReal4x4s »

Thanks for the ideas. The budget is the main factor for me. So many small resto shops use the vinegar technique so I'm trying that one first I suppose. I think I'd have to buy too much of the speciality stuff to cover enough interior space of the tank due to the 40gal size.

The businesses that restore tanks are too far away from me and the mog tank is too big to ship to make it cost effective although that would be great. I've seen some tanks done that way and it looks like most of them cut holes in the tanks to fit sandblasting nozzles into then carefully weld back in patches. Luckily I have a very light corrosion issue so it wont take much.
"For those who risk, life has a flavor the protected shall never enjoy"

Your donation makes this site possible!

Image
Post Reply