[Farmall] Replacing the gas tank
Mike Sloane
mikesloane at verizon.net
Tue Jun 29 10:21:54 PDT 2010
I will give you my opinion, based on some limited experience:
A used tank may look OK on the outside, but the chances are very good
that it has accumulated a lot of varnish/crud over the years. I
recommend that you put a few gallons of soapy water in it, add a couple
of 2' lengths of heavy chain, seal all the openings, and find some way
to agitate the whole thing for about an hour. (I strapped a tank to one
wheel of a Cub. The wheel was jacked up so that it could turn, and then
I started the tractor and ran it in 1st gear.)
<http://public.fotki.com/mikesloane/farmall_140/140_tank_clean1.html>
When you are done, retrieve the chains and flush out the tank
thoroughly, then sit it in the sun to dry - it will heat up pretty
quickly in full sun. Some people use other stuff (rocks, old hardware,
etc.) for cleaning, but I have found that it is much easier to retrieve
the chain.
As far as the old gas in either tank, you can put a little at a time
into your car/truck - the engine's electronics will handle it fine if
you don't overdo it. I use the stuff for washing greasy parts; some
folks use it for starting fires in "burn piles" (which are illegal in
this state).
Don't waste your money on premium gas - the only thing that premium gas
provides is anti-knock additives for high compression engines, nothing
more. And your tractor certainly cannot be thought of as "high
compression", even when new. There are some people who think that
premium gas is better for small engines because they think it has less
ethanol or water in it. I think that is a myth.
Mike
On 6/29/2010 12:23 PM, Tim Savelle wrote:
> I'm about to replace the gas tank on my 1949 H. Some moron who owned it in
> the past put self tapping screws into the top of the tank, apparently to
> mount something. The person who restored it filled the holes with bond-o
> and painted over them. Of course, the gas fumes disintegrated the bond-o,
> and now I have massive paint blisters over the places where the holes are.
> I just decided to get a tank off a parts tractor and replace it rather than
> attempting to have this one fixed.
>
> As far as changing out the tank...is there anything I need to know? I don't
> really see a good way to drain the gas out other than removing the bowl
> assembly, which could spill gas all over the place. Suggestions?
>
> Also, is there any benefit to burning premium gas in the old gal? Would she
> run smoother or better? Any problems it could cause?
>
> Thanks,
> Tim
>
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