I
Ian Rawlings
Guest
Hello peeps, not strictly landy-related but there's more know-how here
than in most forums I'm in. I have a garage queen that I'm trying to
rebuild (just finished rebuilding the engine I removed almost 3 years
ago) and have noticed that the fuel tanks are rusting. There's 70
litres of petrol in there that has been sitting for almost 3 years that
I need to get out into jerry cans, I can't drain it out the bottom and
would like to use a more controlled method anyway as draining it out
the bottom would mean that once it's started coming out, it's going to
be hard to stop.
Am planning on using the time-honoured suck-and-spit method once I can
get at the fuel (can't get the tube in the filler neck), I tried a
Draper siphon pump but it was a waste of time, couldn't even suck
water out of a glass. Anyone know of a good method that doesn't
involve electric pumps (including the car's own pump, don't trust it)
and is controllable?
--
For every expert, there is an equal but opposite expert
than in most forums I'm in. I have a garage queen that I'm trying to
rebuild (just finished rebuilding the engine I removed almost 3 years
ago) and have noticed that the fuel tanks are rusting. There's 70
litres of petrol in there that has been sitting for almost 3 years that
I need to get out into jerry cans, I can't drain it out the bottom and
would like to use a more controlled method anyway as draining it out
the bottom would mean that once it's started coming out, it's going to
be hard to stop.
Am planning on using the time-honoured suck-and-spit method once I can
get at the fuel (can't get the tube in the filler neck), I tried a
Draper siphon pump but it was a waste of time, couldn't even suck
water out of a glass. Anyone know of a good method that doesn't
involve electric pumps (including the car's own pump, don't trust it)
and is controllable?
--
For every expert, there is an equal but opposite expert