I thought it worth posting these pics of one mans answer to the problem of ethanol melting fibreglass petrol tanks, in this case in a 25DD Essex. Former GRA member Ralf Mynn devised an internal alloy tank that fits inside the standard Essex tank shell. It involves cutting the bottom out of the tank and fitting the alloy tank inside, rather like Montessa did on their Cota trials bike, Obviously there is a small loss of capacity, but as the Essex tank holds 3 gallons it will still leave a capacity of over 2 gallons. A permanent fix and one that does not detract from the appearance of the bike.
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Ethanol proofing an Essex Tank
Collapse
X
-
As you know John I have had a couple of 'replica' alloy tanks made for my Enduros. However aluminium is not immune to the dreaded ethanol -
'ethanol is not compatible with soft metals such as zinc, brass, copper, lead, and aluminium. These metals will degrade or corrode in contact with ethanol and possibly contaminate a vehicle's fuel system.'
possibly a slower process I don't know, however perhaps they need lining with a suitable product?
-
Make the inner tank in steel? There are products to line fibreglass tanks, but they may degrade over time. Also, if ethanol has already started to eat into the fibreglass, I understand it is too late to line it. Use Avgas...... Alternatively, in most parts of the country, excluding parts of the NE, as well as the SW and Scotland, Esso superunleaded from the red labelled pumps still do not contain ethanol, even though the pump states 'E5'. That is a legal requirement, but it is up to 5%, and they can trade it off across their E10 products. It is 99 Ron too; good fuel.
Comment
-
Originally posted by tony View PostAs you know John I have had a couple of 'replica' alloy tanks made for my Enduros. However aluminium is not immune to the dreaded ethanol -
'ethanol is not compatible with soft metals such as zinc, brass, copper, lead, and aluminium. These metals will degrade or corrode in contact with ethanol and possibly contaminate a vehicle's fuel system.'
possibly a slower process I don't know, however perhaps they need lining with a suitable product?
Comment
-
Ahhh I have been contemplating exactly this on my 32DD Essex. I had a fellow do a Rickman Metisse tank 5 years ago by this method and it was great. Do we know who did the tank here? It is also an opportunity to fit 2 taps so fuel in one side is not "trapped"
Comment
-
Originally posted by Arthur View PostAhhh I have been contemplating exactly this on my 32DD Essex. I had a fellow do a Rickman Metisse tank 5 years ago by this method and it was great. Do we know who did the tank here? It is also an opportunity to fit 2 taps so fuel in one side is not "trapped"
Comment
-
Originally posted by shelly View PostDoes Roger Ennis do new ethanol proof tanks for that model?
his number is in the club magazine
Comment
-
Finally found somebody to make an alloy tank in my glass fibre Essex one. Then somebody put me onto a young fabricator who wanted to "try" so I bought the scrappy CDX tank tank was recently on e bay in Red and White..it is recoverable but I'm surprised at how different the 2 tanks are . I will keep the Forum posted on how it turns out.
Comment
Comment