Hi.
my first real job is to weld this fuel flap into the main body of the tank, to obtain a smooth tank top. Trouble is, its a wide gap and I'm wondering how to close it up - maybe introdule a filler strip?
in my experience ive found the tommy two weave beaver weave special works lol you shouldnt need to put a filler in it unless the strength of the weld is important, if it is then putting some round/square bar in the gap should do the trick
Personally I'd take that out and make a plate to fit the hole out of some 20g sheet then grind the weld down flush or just use body filler round it as it is to hide it
Personally I'd take that out and make a plate to fit the hole out of some 20g sheet then grind the weld down flush or just use body filler round it as it is to hide it
yeah, I've thoguht about starting with a new piece of steel. Trouble is, being a petrol tank, it's a compond curve and I'm not sure I can bend the plate both ways.
Any advice on forming compond curve would be handy
Hi,
Can't you take off the flap and dress the outer lip flat, therefore making the flap large enought to fit the hole far better for welding, Just a thought!
The aim is to create a smooth tank top with a central alloy 'Monza' fuel cap. So the blanking panel will have circular hole and monza connector collar brazed in.
Metal on the tank and flap is about 0.6mm I guess and the gap I have to weld is 5mm.
Gordon - that's not a bad idea. That way i keep the correct curves of the original flap. Either way it has to be a fuel-tight seam.
By the time you've cut out for the new cap you will not have much of the original curved surface left and I doubt you would notice the flat under the cap lip anyway. With a bit of grinding and filler round it will be invisible. Slightly thicker than the cap will be easier to weld in and I don't understand why the seam has to be fuel tight, surely your Monza cap will be secured to the filler neck inside the bodywork ?
Fuel flap has only a gentle compound curve in it? Easy(ish) way to get a gentle compound curve in a small panel is to just hit it with a hammer on a hard, flat surface. Draw a grid onto the blank, about 3/4" spacing, as a target for the hammer. Hit the panel once in the middle of each square, keep the force of the blows even and use a low crown hammer. After the first round of hammering the panel will have domed very slightly, if you need more do another round of hammering this time hitting where the grid lines intersect
Having been 'empty' for years is no guarentee that the tank will be safe/inert, fuel varnishes can be trapped in seams. Is the filler neck not seperate from the tank, joined via a rubber connecter?
Thanks for that, I'll give it a try.
I have decided that a new panel is probably the best way to go, and with this hammering technique things should work out well.
Under the flap is the top of the tank which has a standard twist cap leading directly in to the tank - no tube.
The monza cap has a 2" rubber tube that I'll feed through.