Good choice.UPDATE: getting an alloy tank.
Fiberglass tank will be for display purposes in the garage.
Thanks to everyone for responding.
Yes, the guys over at Dresda are taking excellent care of me, and are having their logo painted on the alloy tank to exactly match the fiberglass one.Good choice.
Are you getting the tank from Dresda ?
Perfect !Yes, the guys over at Dresda are taking excellent care of me, and are having their logo painted on the alloy tank to exactly match the fiberglass one.
I'm also getting some other items from them to make this bike perfect for me.
A general question is, can a FRC petrol tank based on a polyester resin be lined once the polyester has softened due to the effect of ethanol and polyether-amines in petrol?Is there an 'ultimate' product that completely seals a fiberglass tank?
Has anyone used an original glass tank to make a mould and then form a new tank out of glass/epoxy resins?A general question is, can a FRC petrol tank based on a polyester resin be lined once the polyester has softened due to the effect of ethanol and polyether-amines in petrol?
I believe there is little hope rescuing a used FRC tank unless it was lined from the outset or it was used for a short time only. If the resin is exposed, the chemical structure of the polyester resin is degraded and swells, this is a non-reversible process.
One alternative to producing an aluminum tank is the creation of a blow-molded PVC tank. Tooling costs would be prohibitive. Another alternative is the making of a rubber sack. Tooling costs would be low, but the installation requires the tank to be opened up.
Furthermore. the filler neck would have to be redesigned. Still very expensive and elaborate for most owners, I guess.
- Knut
Lots of reports of sealer lining coming away from inner tank surface...so adhesion appears critical.I wonder about the necessity of the epoxy bonding to the polyester.
With the exception of petcock connection and filler neck , it might be considered it’s own entity - a tank within a tank , if you will . This of course is dependent on the epoxy curing properly and of sufficient wall thickness.
Is Kreem a one component sealer product, no pre-mixing of a resin plus a hardener? If so it would not be an epoxy which requires a catalyst (hardener) to polymerize the resin.All I can definitively say on this topic is-
DO NOT USE KREEM, under ANY circumstances.
I don't recall, other than REMOVING failed Kreem from SEVERAL tanks.Is Kreem a one component sealer product, no pre-mixing of a resin plus a hardener? If so it would not be an epoxy which requires a catalyst (hardener) to polymerize the resin.
What is Dresda? Only know of EMGO and Tab Classic making Commando tanks, other than East Asia hit/miss knock ups.Good choice.
Are you getting the tank from Dresda ?
The OP has a Dresda Triton, not a Commando. He posted here (under advice) coz there’s more traffic and would get a better response to the question.What is Dresda? Only know of EMGO and Tab Classic making Commando tanks, other than East Asia hit/miss knock ups.
Dresda is a historical, renowned Triton builder; often considered the first COMMERCIAL Triton builder.What is Dresda? Only know of EMGO and Tab Classic making Commando tanks, other than East Asia hit/miss knock ups.
They get them made, to their spec. One difference from others is in how they mount to a Dresda modified frame.I don't think they build their own tanks, but I could be wrong...