Fuel Tank Leak
Fuel Tank Leak
I have a rivet seeping proseal on the bottom of my left fuel tank right in the middle of the tank. So I can't put a glob of pro-seal on it from the fuel cap or by opening the access plate where the sender is installed. I understand there has been success drilling out the number 40 hard rivet and modifying a 1/8 cherry max, coating it with pro-seal and installing it. Anyone have the particulars?
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- captain_john
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If this is a flying aircraft, then I'd say the black streak is probably from the loose rivet vibrating and it's aluminum dust ?
I would think you'd also have a blue streak/stain from the fuel residue.
I have heard that you could try the locktite method, but since your weeping is from a bottom rivet, you may have to remove the tank and flip it over to allow the locktite to weep into it from above.
If that doesn't work, you could go the other route with the pro-seal cherry max.
I would think you'd also have a blue streak/stain from the fuel residue.
I have heard that you could try the locktite method, but since your weeping is from a bottom rivet, you may have to remove the tank and flip it over to allow the locktite to weep into it from above.
If that doesn't work, you could go the other route with the pro-seal cherry max.
Dave "WS" Rogers
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RV-8 (125 hrs & counting)
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- captain_john
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I agree, Dave.
If there is no blue, it is just a "smoking rivet" trailing AL dust and oxidizing.
To drill it out, smear in proseal and snap a blind rivet would be my choice. I would use one of those solid baffle rivets, though.
CJ
If there is no blue, it is just a "smoking rivet" trailing AL dust and oxidizing.
To drill it out, smear in proseal and snap a blind rivet would be my choice. I would use one of those solid baffle rivets, though.

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I guess if one is very careful, you could just drill deep enough to pop the head off, and use a drift punch of the correct diameter to knock the bucktail through. One bucktail may be better than a bunch of shaving fuzzies floating around inside.LooseNut wrote:If you drill out the rivet, doesn't that put some loose metal bits and shavings into the tank???
LooseNut
True.Gotta fix it, though!
Just thinking that maybe one of the no-drill fixes might be worth a try first to avoid bad stuff in the tank. You know, the seeping Lock-Tite or something else that has already been suggested. ... If that doesn't work, then go to the drill-the-rivet solution.
It might work out, or it might end up being more futzing around. Maybe worth it to avoid bad gas ju-ju.
Yup, with some care, ya ought to be able to minimize the problem, probably no shavings in the tank at all ... they would all be falling on the outside of the thank.I guess if one is very careful, you could just drill deep enough to pop the head off, and use a drift punch of the correct diameter to knock the bucktail through. One bucktail may be better than a bunch of shaving fuzzies floating around inside.
... always thinking of what can go wrong ... call me Mr Sunshine!

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