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#1
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower
gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Some possibilities we thought of a * using a soldering iron to try melting the plastic together - we thought that would just end up with a melted blob of plastic if we did this * using a hot melt glue gun to stick the plastic together- that is still a maybe but we doubt it would hold as the gasoline could dissolve the hot melt glue * using some sort of teflon tape to wrap around the plastic spigot & then pushing the replacement gas line up flush with the bottom of the tank & clamping it on. * or maybe there is a special glue for this purpose? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Cindy |
#2
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
Plastic welding would be the best fix. The soldering iron is a
decent approach though there are real plastic welders that weld with hot air and additional plastic. Probably not worthwhile for a one time activity. Don't get too carried away with the soldering iron. You could wrap the stem with some fine copper wire for additional strength. One other thing that could work would involve cutting a larger hole that would receive a bolt-on tire valve with the Schrader valve removed. ___________________________ Keep the whole world singing. . . . DanG wrote in message ps.com... We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Some possibilities we thought of a * using a soldering iron to try melting the plastic together - we thought that would just end up with a melted blob of plastic if we did this * using a hot melt glue gun to stick the plastic together- that is still a maybe but we doubt it would hold as the gasoline could dissolve the hot melt glue * using some sort of teflon tape to wrap around the plastic spigot & then pushing the replacement gas line up flush with the bottom of the tank & clamping it on. * or maybe there is a special glue for this purpose? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Cindy |
#3
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
jb weld
-- Steve Barker wrote in message ps.com... We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Some possibilities we thought of a * using a soldering iron to try melting the plastic together - we thought that would just end up with a melted blob of plastic if we did this * using a hot melt glue gun to stick the plastic together- that is still a maybe but we doubt it would hold as the gasoline could dissolve the hot melt glue * using some sort of teflon tape to wrap around the plastic spigot & then pushing the replacement gas line up flush with the bottom of the tank & clamping it on. * or maybe there is a special glue for this purpose? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Cindy |
#4
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
Steve Barker LT writes:
jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. Epoxy does not bond to polyethylene fuel tanks. |
#5
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
I've used it for years to repair weedeater tanks where I work. And it
holds. -- Steve Barker "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message .. . Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. Epoxy does not bond to polyethylene fuel tanks. |
#6
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
Richard J Kinch wrote: Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. Epoxy does not bond to polyethylene fuel tanks. JBWeld, I agree, will not work here. It does a few things that plain epoxy won't though. D |
#7
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
JB Weld is epoxy, sure, but its very GOOD epoxy, and it does stick to a lot
of things that most 'normal' household epoxy doesn't. Why do you discourage it's use so strongly? it does work quite well. Whether or not it will work in this instance I don't know..but it won't hurt to give it a try -- Mike S. -- Mike S. "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message .. . Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. Epoxy does not bond to polyethylene fuel tanks. |
#8
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
In article , Richard J Kinch wrote:
Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. As usual when it comes to anything involving chemistry, you don't know what the hell you're talking about. Yes, it's epoxy-based -- but that's not all it is. Google up the MSDS on JB Weld. Then tell me that calcium carbonate, iron powder, and magnesium silicate are normal constituents in most epoxies. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#9
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
Doug Miller writes:
As usual when it comes to anything involving chemistry, you don't know what the h... Your insulting demeanor doesn't deserve anyone's attention. Your point is just a semantic quibble. Do you have anyone close in real life? Haven't they warned you about your malicious habits of speech? |
#10
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
In article , Richard J Kinch wrote:
Your point is just a semantic quibble. No, it's not just a "semantic quibble" -- you're *wrong*. JB Weld is *not* just overpriced epoxy as you claim it is. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#11
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
In article , Richard J Kinch wrote:
Doug Miller writes: As usual when it comes to anything involving chemistry, you don't know what the h... Your insulting demeanor doesn't deserve anyone's attention. I'll make you a deal: you stop posting bulls**t, and I'll stop pointing out that you're posting bulls**t. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#12
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
(Doug Miller) wrote in
. com: In article , Richard J Kinch wrote: Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. As usual when it comes to anything involving chemistry, you don't know what the hell you're talking about. Yes, it's epoxy-based -- but that's not all it is. Google up the MSDS on JB Weld. Then tell me that calcium carbonate, iron powder, and magnesium silicate are normal constituents in most epoxies. Epoxies used for gluing have fillers of all sorts. Fillers don't do anything to increase the bonding ability;that comes from the chemistry of the epoxy itself.Same for hi-temperature endurance. For some good info on epoxies;www.systemthree.com,read The Epoxy Book;you can download it for free. -- Jim Yanik jyanik at kua.net |
#13
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
In article , Jim Yanik wrote:
(Doug Miller) wrote in .com: In article , Richard J Kinch wrote: Steve Barker LT writes: jb weld JB "Weld" is just overpriced EPOXY. As usual when it comes to anything involving chemistry, you don't know what the hell you're talking about. Yes, it's epoxy-based -- but that's not all it is. Google up the MSDS on JB Weld. Then tell me that calcium carbonate, iron powder, and magnesium silicate are normal constituents in most epoxies. Epoxies used for gluing have fillers of all sorts. Yes, but they don't typically include the stuff that's in JB Weld. Fillers don't do anything to increase the bonding ability; I didn't say it did -- I just said Kinch was wrong when he said it's just overpriced epoxy. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#14
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
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#16
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
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#17
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
"mm" wrote in message ... On 21 Nov 2006 20:37:45 -0800, wrote: We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Some possibilities we thought of a * using a soldering iron to try melting the plastic together - we thought that would just end up with a melted blob of plastic if we did this No. You'll just get a bigger hole. * using a hot melt glue gun to stick the plastic together- that is still a maybe but we doubt it would hold as the gasoline could dissolve the hot melt glue If you try hot glue, heat the plastic first with a heat gun or hair dryer. If it's hat already, the hot glue sticks better. I very much doubt it. Won't stick. You might also try GE silicone. Available in 2 oz tubes at autoparts stores, in black. Again if it doesn't work you can srape it off. Also available in caulking gun size tubes for far less money per ounce, and probably won't dry out for months (or years?) if you seal it well. Mine came with a cap but I used plastic electric tape wound tight to go over the nozzle and cap. Once you try silicone, you will likely have problems getting anything to stick. Bob |
#18
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
In article , mm wrote:
You might also try GE silicone. Available in 2 oz tubes at autoparts stores, in black. Again if it doesn't work you can srape it off. Yes, but... you can forget about anything ever sticking to it again after you've put silicone on it. -- Regards, Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com) It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again. |
#19
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
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#20
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
I contacted the local lawn mower repair shop & they have a replacement
spigot just for this situation. You cut off the old plastic spigot, drill a hole & insert a replacement spigot that screws tight to the tank bottom. In our case we were able to just push the new gas line up tight to the bottom of the tank and use two clamps to hold it in place. No leaks!!! |
#21
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
Yes there is a glue (sealant) that is made for such fixes. It will stick to
plastic or what ever and will not dissolve with gas. I have used in plenty of times on leaky gas tanks. Metal and plastic. This spring I sealed a Briggs and Stratton mower, plastic gas tank that was leaking badly at a join. I used this mower all summer with no leaks. The stuff is called "Seal All" and can be bought at hardware stores or automotive parts stores. Several thin coats are better than one thick one. Allow to dry between coats. wrote in message ps.com... We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Some possibilities we thought of a * using a soldering iron to try melting the plastic together - we thought that would just end up with a melted blob of plastic if we did this * using a hot melt glue gun to stick the plastic together- that is still a maybe but we doubt it would hold as the gasoline could dissolve the hot melt glue * using some sort of teflon tape to wrap around the plastic spigot & then pushing the replacement gas line up flush with the bottom of the tank & clamping it on. * or maybe there is a special glue for this purpose? All suggestions appreciated. Thanks, Cindy |
#22
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
wrote in message ps.com... We were trying to remove a stuck on gas line from a plastic lawnmower gas tank & used a very sharp razor knife to cut through the gas line. The gas line came off - but you guessed it - we put a nice clean slit in half of the plastic nipple coming off the bottom of the tank. The slit runs up to maybe 1/16" to the bottom of the tank. Other than replacing the tank - Anyone know of a way to patch the slit up? Another possibility would be to drill out the nipple and use some type of a "weldless" fitting in the hole. It would probably use a gasket and screw tightening to form a seal. Bob |
#23
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Plastic Gas Tank Spigot Cut With Razor Knife
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