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Continuing from another thread, the 72 Pantera I am working has a 3/72 build date. I have already. pulled the drain plug. At first, the twisting action was torquing the sheet metal. I have seen this before in other projects, so did what I have done in the past - 3/8" impact. Worked perfectly and quickly, and out came 8 gallons of orange fluid that SMELLED like gasoline!! Anyway, I have not yet disposed of it and had planned on adding a couple gallons of gas and the rest in diesel fuel. (Disclaimer - that idea came from a Pantera supplier.) Once in there, check for leaks and after a couple days slosh it with a long paint stir stick, pump it out and drain the rest. Strain it as needed and repeat. Once what CAN be removed will be, then leave the cap open to air out. Once ready to fire up the engine, a few gallons of fresh gas would go in to see if the fuel pump is still good !! FWIW, when I pulled the plug on the tank, there was some sediment in it, but not a lot. Also planned it a transparent fuel filter in the first fuel line about 4-6" from the tank fitting so what is coming out can be seen. I would rather ruin a dozen of THOSE things than pull the power train out. Ultimately, the owner knows that the tank may be an issue and is resigned to whatever has to be done.
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Try this.

Hook up an electric fuel pump that pulls through the fuel pickup tube and dumps into the filler or the gauge sender hole.

Put a couple of gallons on new gas in it and let the thing run a couple of days.

There really isn't anything better at cleaning the inside of the tank then gas is.

Put one of your clear filters in line to the pump. Keep changing everything until it all runs clean.

I changed th tank plug type to what is used now, an Allen socket drive with o ring. It is lower profile then the original. I believe the application was Audi.
Mine had mud in it when I bought it.varnish and rust. I opened the tank drained out into a bucket, put some gas in ( about a gallon) more mud... I put a garden hose in it and ran it overnight. Lasted about 2 years then pulled the tank had it boiled and creamed at a radiator repair shop. It is funny when you tell other gearheads, I had to pull the gas tank out of my car then you say the first step is to pull the seats out of the car.....! Good luck with it. Mine started with the gas tank.... turned into a complete repaint ah the things we do for love smile.
quote:
Originally posted by PanteraDoug:
Try this.

Hook up an electric fuel pump that pulls through the fuel pickup tube and dumps into the filler or the gauge sender hole.

Put a couple of gallons on new gas in it and let the thing run a couple of days.

There really isn't anything better at cleaning the inside of the tank then gas is.

Put one of your clear filters in line to the pump. Keep changing everything until it all runs clean.



Hmm ... me like dat.

BTW, what sort of fuel pump did you use? If it's a 12 volt, they will take some serious battery use.
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