Home 
Home Search search Menu menu Not logged in - Login | Register
> Jensen Healey & Jensen GT Tech > Carburetors > stuff under the gas tank

 Moderated by: Greg Fletcher
New Topic Reply Printer Friendly
stuff under the gas tank  Rating:  Rating
AuthorPost
 Posted: 05-06-2007 12:46 pm
  PM Quote Reply
1st Post
kfsmith
Member
 

Joined: 01-28-2007
Location:  
Posts: 4
Status: 
Offline
Well, after I got the jensen running, I came out the next morn to a puddle of fuel under it. Fuel line was rotted and the trunk smelled of gas. My fuel tank was shot so I purchased a steel on from jorge. What are people putting under the gas tank when they replace it ... lord knows I don't want to put anything back in like what was there as I like my new gas tank without rust

 

Thanks in advance

kevin 

 

 

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 05-06-2007 10:39 pm
  PM Quote Reply
2nd Post
John Kimbrough
Member
 

Joined: 03-12-2005
Location: Washington USA
Posts: 116
Status: 
Offline
You will probably get lots of opinions, but I glued strips of old inner tube on the trunk floor and slipped the tank in.  Cheap and effective.  It will not retain water and insulates well.  Also, if you get a block of duct seal (a kind of sticky clay-like material we use in industry to waterproof wire openings in conduit) and make a ring of it to stick around the drain opening, it will keep water out of the trunk.  John.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

 Posted: 05-07-2007 06:35 am
  PM Quote Reply
3rd Post
Pat Connor
Member


Joined: 03-12-2005
Location: San Dimas, California USA
Posts: 21
Status: 
Offline
Hi Kevin:

I used a rubber door mat from Home depot cut to fit. Low tech but it does not hold fuel or water thereby limiting rust and chances of fire in the trunk.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 05-24-2007 02:00 pm
  PM Quote Reply
4th Post
sjensen24
Member
 

Joined: 08-05-2005
Location: Brooklyn Park, Minnesota USA
Posts: 78
Status: 
Offline
I used closed cell foam of the type used as padding under a floating floor.  I rolled it in a tube about 2" in diameter and glued it to the floor of the trunk running front to back in four locations.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

 Posted: 05-24-2007 03:40 pm
  PM Quote Reply
5th Post
Jensen Healey
Super Moderator


Joined: 03-11-2005
Location: San Anselmo, California USA
Posts: 983
Status: 
Offline
Years ago someone suggested using those old timing belts that accumulate in the garage.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: 05-28-2007 08:49 pm
  PM Quote Reply
6th Post
Jensenman
Member
 

Joined: 04-14-2005
Location: Columbia, South Carolina USA
Posts: 156
Status: 
Offline
Air has to be able to circulate around the tank or the rust will come back so the tank can't sit directly on the trunk floor and you don't want to use anything that will hold water.

I bought a couple of cheap rubber truck mud flaps and cut them into 8 1" wide strips long enough to support the tank. I then glued them to the bottom of the tank (after painting it of course) and sealed the area under the tank (trunk floor) with Eastwood red oxide rust sealing primer and then painted the area white to match the car. Don't plug or seal around the fuel line hole, if water gets in that's the only way it can get back out. Speaking of water getting in the trunk, the #1 source is the fuel fill neck seal. That 'well' it sits in lets water collect when washing the car or when it's raining and it goes straight down the fill neck to the tank.

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

Current time is 02:13 pm  
> Jensen Healey & Jensen GT Tech > Carburetors > stuff under the gas tank Top




UltraBB 1.172 Copyright © 2007-2011 Data 1 Systems