View Single Post
  #105   Report Post  
Posted to rec.crafts.metalworking
Frnak McKenney Frnak McKenney is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 87
Default Repairing an abraded poly(?) trashcan (was: Having a...

On Tue, 04 May 2010 09:37:44 -0500, Lloyd E. Sponenburgh wrote:

Any ideas? Or is this a Complete Waste of Time?


I just last month welded shut a large hole in the radiator overflow tank
of my SIL's Neon.

I cleaned and sanded the patch and the area around the hole with 80-grit
paper. Then I preheated both the patch and the tank area until both were
tacky and transparent (and beginning to sag), and applied the patch with
pressure until it cooled just enough to handle (used a stick and a wad of
paper towels down through the filler neck to apply pressure from the
inside, as well). Last, I "filleted" the edges of the patch to full-melt
down onto the tank body with a spreader tip on a big Weller soldering
gun, taking care not to cut into the tank material.

It is holding up fine so far, and it's under the abuse of hot fluids and
hot engine compartment. We examined the patch a few times with a
flashlight, and can't see any evidence of antifreeze leaking between
patch and tank wall.

Since your can isn't subject to pressure or extreme heat, I'd think just
an "overlay" of (say) 1/8" poly would do the trick; applied basically the
same way.


LLoyd,

Thank you for replying. You're a braver soul than I. grin!

It's very reassuring to hear from someone who has actually done something
similar to what I plan... especially the part about "holding up fine".
You also jarred my thinking a bit with the word "tank", so I did a bit of
searching on "patch plastic tank" and turned up all sorts of suggestions
and even kits.

Now all I need is a poly sheet perhaps 2'x1'. Any suggestions? For this
job even that "currogated" stuff would be fine.


Frakn
--
A striking fact of the last two years of financial trouble is how
accountability has differed in the public and private spheres. On
Wall Street and across the country, decades-old firms have failed,
fortunes have vanished, and some former captains of finance face
jail or fines. In Washington, meanwhile, most regulators and
Members of Congress remain on the job, often with enhanced power.
-- "Bernanke's Second Chance" / Wall Street Journal 08/26/09
--
Frank McKenney, McKenney Associates
Richmond, Virginia / (804) 320-4887
Munged E-mail: frank uscore mckenney ayut mined spring dawt cahm (y'all)