Skylark
Well-Known Member
Not quite a boaty subject...........please indulge me 
My road bike has been off the road for 3 years. It's only a summer use toy and I've had 3 good sailing seasons (there, now it's boaty!). Or should I say "my outboard motor has been unused for 3 years"
The petrol in the tank has degraded and separated and it's left an almost tar like residue. The tap was completely blocked and nothing, other than scraping it, would touch it. Fresh petrol, WD40, thinners, nothing. It also has an acrid smell, not petrol like at all.
I've played with engines for most of my life and I've never witnessed anything as bad as this. For example, I have a 1950's Lister stationary engine and its fuel tank has lain undisturbed for 15 years or more and still smells of petrol.
My question to the learned forum is "can anything be done with the inside of the tank" Access, of course, is near impossible to the whole of the inside. Should I simply ignore it and leave it bathed in fresh?
Appreciate any similar experiences and advice?
My road bike has been off the road for 3 years. It's only a summer use toy and I've had 3 good sailing seasons (there, now it's boaty!). Or should I say "my outboard motor has been unused for 3 years"
The petrol in the tank has degraded and separated and it's left an almost tar like residue. The tap was completely blocked and nothing, other than scraping it, would touch it. Fresh petrol, WD40, thinners, nothing. It also has an acrid smell, not petrol like at all.
I've played with engines for most of my life and I've never witnessed anything as bad as this. For example, I have a 1950's Lister stationary engine and its fuel tank has lain undisturbed for 15 years or more and still smells of petrol.
My question to the learned forum is "can anything be done with the inside of the tank" Access, of course, is near impossible to the whole of the inside. Should I simply ignore it and leave it bathed in fresh?
Appreciate any similar experiences and advice?