Fuel tank woes

   / Fuel tank woes #1  

wango tango

Silver Member
Joined
Mar 7, 2011
Messages
211
Location
Peoria IL
We have a 1969 Oliver 1650 gas. The fuel tank has so much debris in it that it constantly causes issues. We have removed and tried cleaning it twice. Including coating it on the inside dine by a radiator shop. Nothing works, I want to replace it.

They are discontinued. Looks like we will have to fabricate one. What are my best chances here? What kind of money am I looking at if I get a tank fabricated?
 
   / Fuel tank woes #2  
I would see if you can find a polyethylene tank that would fit in place of the metal one. If u don’t like the idea of a plastic tank then try replacing with a racing car fuel tank.
 
   / Fuel tank woes #3  
If it will fit, try a boat tank. The flat style. You will need to put a port in the bottom if it will physically fit. This is likely one of the least expensive route, will not rust and is fairly easy to remove ti clean and fairly easy to locate.
 
   / Fuel tank woes #4  
   / Fuel tank woes #5  
They make stuff that will coat the inside of a tank and seal it. I used a kit years ago from Eastwood Company on a classic car.
 
   / Fuel tank woes
  • Thread Starter
#6  
   / Fuel tank woes #8  
The first screen on the Steiner page is one that sticks up in the tank a couple of inches to screen out crap before it gets to the sediment bowl.
I used one on 1550 several years ago and it helped.
I finally got my tank cleaned out by sloshing around a couple of big hand fulls of 1/4" nuts and a couple of gallons of diesel.
It took quite a bit I actually strapped the tank in my pickup and drove it to work, I would rotate to a different side daily.
Rough roads and lots of turns did wonders.

I have heard of people strapping them to a cement mixer to agitate and clean.
 
   / Fuel tank woes #9  
That is just a hard row to hoe.

We ran into an issue on replacing the gas tank on our 1966 Ford 3000. The after market bolted on just fine but had a shorter neck so my tractor guy took it back off and cut the top off just below the cap and cut the neck off of the old one and took it his muffler man and had him swell the old neck so he could just tap it down over the new neck and welded it on to the new tank.

I know you do not have a new one so all I am saying by thinking outside of the box might help a solution to pop into your head.

Korves Oliver - YouTube

Korves was mentioned in another TBN thread.

https://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/parts-repairs/199404-new-gas-tank-oliver-1650-a.html
 
   / Fuel tank woes #10  
We had a great fuel tank sloshing compound for antique cars but added alcohol to reformulated gasoline turned it into slime...
 

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