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Oil in the trunk - where does it come from???


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I've had an aluminium tank welded in the past. Off the car of course  

The specialist welder asked me to empty it and leave it for a few days with all connections open for as much fuel as possible to evaporate. Then stick a rubber hose up the exhaust of my diesel car with the engine running with it directed into the aluminium tank filler hole for about half an hour. He was then happy to weld the tank. 

Dave McD

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I would go for a steel tank. The tank stiffens the structure of the body. even the Aluminum ones have not the same stiffness than the steel ones (that is what the experts here in Germany say). According to that plastic tank makes no sense at all and I have never heard of one.

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Hi Floschi,

in my opinion (I could be wrong) two things make the TR body stiff to stand side forces:

at the front the "support bracket" from the dashboard to the floor,

at the rear the steel petrol tank!

Aluminium is already the second choice, please don't think of plastic.

Ciao, Marco

Edited by Z320
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That's a lot of black. Could it be that the tank has been internally anodised and a black dye used ? How black is the fuel in the tank?

Its only a small hole and towards the top of the tank. I suggest an petrol-resistant epoxy resin.

Peter

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First check is to destinguish between a failure of the tank itself (likely a weld then) or a simple issue with one of the many connections, as Neil ((NTC) suggests.

Follow the leaked fuel trail. Do not forget the top (filling) hose.

If the tank is suspected, remove it for further inspection and if needed, repair. It looks like there is a (stress) crack near a weld in one of your pics, but from my experience I know pictures can be misleading.

Waldi

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Maybe its the 'durafix' stuff that Marco means rather than soft-solder?  That does need a blow-torch though so still as potentially unsafe as welding. 

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On 11/16/2019 at 3:47 AM, Peter Cobbold said:

That's a lot of black. Could it be that the tank has been internally anodised and a black dye used ? How black is the fuel in the tank?

 

I had the same. I believe it is the additives in the (higher octane) petrol, and the leak (more a seep) is just the right speed for it to half evaporate before it spreads.

Mine is a steel tank, completely original except for an acid clean about 10 years ago and was slow leaking for a pipe junction with the filter

Edited by stallie
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