Your does not.Also those tubes have a check ball in them.
If it has an older metal gas tank like mine has, it will accumulate rust and pass the rust to carb. I soaked my tank with muriatic acid, rinsed thoroughly with baking soda/water but still accumulated rust and passed rust to carb. You might be able to find an after market plastic tank.I am working on a briggs tiller model 130297 type 301501 code 88090207 and I replaced the tank gasket and the diaphram and it will idle fine when I adjust the needle valve but when I try to speed it up it stalls. I made sure the long tube was clear and I cleaned the hole in the side of the part that goes in the fuel pick up are. If I move the throttle slow toward high speed it will pick up speed for 2 seconds then stall. If I turn the needle valve out it will pick up speed if I move the throttle and sometines stay running but it won't idle smooth.
I just got through red koting some of those tanks.If it has an older metal gas tank like mine has, it will accumulate rust and pass the rust to carb. I soaked my tank with muriatic acid, rinsed thoroughly with baking soda/water but still accumulated rust and passed rust to carb. You might be able to find an after market plastic tank.
No, final rinse after it's removed from the tumbler is a manual rinse with small amount lacquer thinner or acetone.So after you tumble it with the nuts and bolts just use soap and water to rinch it? thanks.
Hi Forest#2,No, final rinse after it's removed from the tumbler is a manual rinse with small amount lacquer thinner or acetone.
I tumble with the tractor tire just using very little water with the nuts and bolts and have the tank where I can drain the water and rinse with the tank strapped in place. When the rinse water comes clean the inside is clean. Soap is not necessary. Use a piece of old carpet or padded protector under or around the tank when strapped to the tractor wheel.
To prep for the red kote I rinse the inside with little bit of lacquer thinner or acetone then use a heat lamp or heater and a fan to move little bit of air over the tank while its drying internally.
I use two coats of the liner, first coat sets for about 8-12 hours with very low air flow across the tank from a low speed fan and I keep the tank just slightly warm using a light bulb or heat lamp. The cap is off so the tank can breath. The first coat is not thick, I dump out the excess and save it for the 2nd coat and apply the 2nd coat while the first coat is still slightly tacky. I rotate the tank about every hour so as to get an even coating inside.
I let the tank dry for several days using the low heat and fan before adding fuel. I can do several one gallon small engine tanks using 1/2 pint of the sealer and saves time doing several at same time.
I also do large tanks using the tractor tire tumbling cleaning.
On very large tanks I sometimes make a drain hole to drain out the excess sealer then seal the hole during the final coat.
Mainly just follow the instructions for applying the sealer in use.
Hi Forest#2,
I use a similar method with the steel farm tractor fuel tanks except in a larger scale and I use 4-inch short pieces of various sized chains as tumbler material.
Regardless of tank size, the rattle and shake by hand method gets old really fast. It is much easier to strap them to a tractor wheel or similar slow-moving vehicle and let it do the "hard work".
Recently, I've been considering using evapo-rust liquid to dissolve and convert the rust, but I don't think it will be effective in dealing with old residual fuel resins. I'm going to try it in some in a couple of small engine metal tanks to see how it works.