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Jun 28, 2017
11:55
:41
pm
Superman21
Playmaker
That freaking worked!
Can I use the epoxy on it now? Or is that useless with the soap on it?
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Superman21
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Superman21
Joined
Jun 16, 2014
Last login
May 16, 2024
Total posts
5,408 (124 FO)
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Messages
Author
Time
Struggling to seal a leaky gas tank in the pickup.
Superman21
6/28/17 10:26pm
Have you considered welding something to it first to stop the leak then epoxy it
Fatalplacebo
6/28/17 10:32pm
It's a plastic tank
Superman21
6/28/17 10:32pm
And?
Fatalplacebo
6/28/17 10:34pm
Fine, ok. In all seriousness, I'd drain it. Don't make the hole bigger.
Fatalplacebo
6/28/17 10:38pm
If it were metal, you'd weld it while it was full. But, plastic...I got nothin.
OldCosmo
6/28/17 10:49pm
Weld while it's full? Are you trying to kill Superman?
Pimpin4Paradise
6/28/17 11:05pm
Yes, you weld on a tank when it's full. There's a reason it's called GASoline.
OldCosmo
6/28/17 11:47pm
Growing up my dad took a bar of soap and rubbed it over the pinhole in the tank and it worked like a charm. I don't
Rhino84
6/28/17 11:22pm
That freaking worked!
Superman21
6/28/17 11:55pm
If it's dry I'd epoxy the crap out of it with the appropriate stuff.
Backcountry
6/29/17 12:11am
Sounds like you should drain the tank to do a solid epoxy repair.
nuts
6/28/17 11:51pm
I did the soap which stopped the seaping
Superman21
6/29/17 12:19am
Drain the tank, weld the plastic. Job's done forever.
Squeegee
6/29/17 6:28am
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