If so where do you get somthing like this done, obviosly i want to know if it leaks and if so where from?.....
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Sef
I thought along the same lines, presumably you could then put it in the bath and look for bubbles ala my chopper way back when. I kind of like the the idea of doing it like this, seems very heath robinson....grayspeed wrote:I'd seal the filler cap off and make some sort of adapter with a tyre valve which can then be gently pressurised with a tyre inflator.
This sound like the go and have most of the things i need. If you do find a leak in the seam on the side that shows how do you go about welding it without just lobbing a load of metal on the outside of the seam making it ugly?Knowledge wrote:If your tank has a fairly standard filler cap, you can do it this way.
Fit a fuel tap and turn it off. Now cut the valve out of an old inner tube, leaving about an inch and a half radius of rubber around the valve. Place this over the filler cap neck and secure it with a jubilee clip. Pump up the tank using a foot pump (about 8 or 10 pumps should be plenty).
Now mix up a solution of water and washing-up liquid (like a kid's bubble mixture) and apply this to the welds on the tank using a small paint brush. If there is a problem, there will be bubbles (both large and small).
I have used this techique many, many times on cut-n-shut tanks I have made. It works. The main advantage over the paraffin method is that you can then re-weld the seam without fear of a lethal explosion. You also haven't introduced any water into the tank, so it won't rust.