Talon Motorsport
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posted on 21/3/13 at 10:05 PM |
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Ex LPG tank for petrol
I've been asked to make a tough petrol tank for a 4x4 for light off roading after the owner split the under body tank twice. I was going to
fabricate one from 2mm sheet but thinking about it is there any reason an ex LPG tank could'nt be used? It's got to be 2-3mm thick,
it's round so that adds more strength and it's got a sender unit already fitted. Can any body see problems with replacing one flamable
liquid with another? Obviously it will be flushed out before the TIG goes any where near it for the feed,vent and return.
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ReMan
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posted on 21/3/13 at 10:26 PM |
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Good idea to my mind, beats old beer barrels!
www.plusnine.co.uk
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britishtrident
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posted on 21/3/13 at 10:53 PM |
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Weight an LPG tank is very heavy and generally they mount by being strapped to frame.
The vent can be added by drilling the tank unit.
Adding a spigot fill line will be the biggest problem.
[I] “ What use our work, Bennet, if we cannot care for those we love? .”
― From BBC TV/Amazon's Ripper Street.
[/I]
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Talon Motorsport
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posted on 21/3/13 at 11:09 PM |
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It's going on a 1800kg 4x4 with a rollcage, winch and a 19 stone driver not a 400kg single seater, I don't think weight will be an issue.
The best part about having a light engineering/fabrication workshop is that making holes in things and welding them back up is not really a problem.
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MikeRJ
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posted on 22/3/13 at 10:47 AM |
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Can't think of any reasons why it shouldn't work. If you can pick one up cheaper than fabricating it then it makes sense.
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gremlin1234
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posted on 22/3/13 at 10:47 AM |
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why not just put a 'sump guard' under a standard tank?
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Talon Motorsport
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posted on 22/3/13 at 12:27 PM |
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It's not the ground that is putting holes in the tank it's things like farm jacks,shovels and sand ladders. I suggested putting the tank
in the boot but it still needs to be able to carry the kids buggy and a weeks shopping.
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sebastiaan
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posted on 22/3/13 at 01:37 PM |
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That will work. Just make sure to replace all the rubber components in all the valves with petrol compatible ones. Spigot filler through the level
sensor hole, take-off through the dip tube underneath the LPG shut-off valve (which is NOT petrol compatible!!!), block other holes, done!
Test req. for an LPG tank is 67,5 Bar burst pressure.
A multivalve (one-hole) tank woudl work as well, but is more work.
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