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CBV8 SD1 User

Joined: 16 Sep 2007 Posts: 50
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Posted: Tue Feb 26, 2008 11:32 pm Post subject: Look at the state of my insides frightening or what!!! |
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Hi All,
Having removed the petrol tank from my motor today to try and repair a leak in it which i did rolling it off the trailer  i found this frightening scaley limescale stuff coated inside the tank and on the sender  Suffice to say the whole lot is scrap it looks like the tank has come from the bottom of the ocean or summot my SD1 has not run for about 7yrs and i can only assume that this is what having no fuel or stale fuel in your tank does after many years  The only reason i took the sender out is to see if the mesh filter was still in place lucky i did really i have replaced the fuel pump which was siezed solid and the sender now i can see why  So there you go if your fuel pump has packed up or you are buying an SD1 or any other car for that matter that has been standing for a few years this is probably how your insides look
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_________________ Cheers,
Chas.
1985 VDP EFI. |
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Punx0r SD1 Regular
Joined: 05 Nov 2006 Posts: 247
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Posted: Thu Feb 28, 2008 1:44 am Post subject: |
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That exactly what mine looked like
The sender resumed operation after being brushed, WD40'ed and submerged in a full tank for a while.
My car had stood for a similar time and the pump was also siezed solid. Stripped it and cleaned it, but it didn't work properly afterwards (very low output pressure).
After a lot of cleaning the tank has been put back into service, but with an EFI filter before the fuel pump as the last of the rust is still coming through. £200 for a new tank was convincing enough to "mend and make do".
Did you also find lots of thick black, tar like stuff in your pipework? My pump was full of it and when draining the tank of the old petrol and a great big sausage of it oozed out of the pipe from the tank... |
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CBV8 SD1 User

Joined: 16 Sep 2007 Posts: 50
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Punx0r SD1 Regular
Joined: 05 Nov 2006 Posts: 247
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 2:29 pm Post subject: |
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No sandy coloured stuff here. The petrol that came out smelt just like thinners.
Removing the rust just took a little time - add a handful of large gravel and some petrol, shake furiously for a minute, pour into a bowl and repeat until the petrol coming out is clean.
The replacement pump I fitted has a fine mesh strainer fitted inside the inlet pipe and this did become blocked after the cleaning. So I extended the pipe and fitted a fuel filter, It's very similar to the one in the engine bay, but only about 2" in diameter. It's cable tied to the handbrake cable and tucked up nicely in the transmission tunnel.
I recently replaced it after a few months of occasional use as it became blocked. I think that this is likely to be the last of the crud though.
The pipework inside the tank also became blocked (once the tank was removed and completely drained/dried) with the black tar stuff. 150psi of air wouldn't shift it, but we eventually cleared it with a length of steel wire rope, thinners and vacuum.
Another option might be a coating product that I believe you can get to seal tanks with small leaks. This would hopefully bind up any rust.
HTH |
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CBV8 SD1 User

Joined: 16 Sep 2007 Posts: 50
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Posted: Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:31 pm Post subject: |
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Hi Punx0r,
The old fuel that came out of mine smelt of old paint or turps terrible stink  i have just managed to pick a good EFI tank off my mate for a few beer tokens very lucky  So i'm going to look after this one if someone wants to have a go at cleaning and repairing me old tank they can have it free gratis  _________________ Cheers,
Chas.
1985 VDP EFI. |
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Punx0r SD1 Regular
Joined: 05 Nov 2006 Posts: 247
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CBV8 SD1 User

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Punx0r SD1 Regular
Joined: 05 Nov 2006 Posts: 247
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Posted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 4:10 pm Post subject: |
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Just bite the bullet and get another pump  I too wondered about a submersible pump since I had a pefectly capable one to hand, but it looked like a pain.
Whilst changing the fuel filter on my uncles mercedes (W123 I think, bosch jetronic mechanical injection), the fuel pumps (It had two) looked remarkably similar to the SD1 pumps. |
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CBV8 SD1 User

Joined: 16 Sep 2007 Posts: 50
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Posted: Thu Mar 06, 2008 9:46 pm Post subject: |
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Nah am going in-tank mate i have nearly finished modifying the SD1 sender unit and grafted a Range Rover efi pump to it  So if or when it decides to die a death hopefully never  i just purchase another pump and attach  and i have the benefit of NO crawling underneath to change the damn thing  _________________ Cheers,
Chas.
1985 VDP EFI. |
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Punx0r SD1 Regular
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Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2008 12:26 am Post subject: |
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What have you done about the pipe work? |
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CBV8 SD1 User

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Punx0r SD1 Regular
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Posted: Sun Mar 09, 2008 9:09 pm Post subject: |
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No worries, I was just curious because I'd considered converting to an in-tank pump myself. |
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CBV8 SD1 User

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Punx0r SD1 Regular
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Posted: Mon Mar 17, 2008 12:13 am Post subject: |
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I had to replace the pre-pump filter on mine a few weeks ago. You know when its due as the fuel starts becoming noisey so that you can hear it when driving. |
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CBV8 SD1 User

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