Be sure to thoroughly inspect the fuel tank before you buy an old k bike--look for discolored paint bubbles and blisters along the bottom edge and seams as these are pinhole leaks just waiting to burst. Thank your uncle sam for the wonderful ethanol fuel and the blessings it brings to our daily life...
i should have known better than to think this this bike was ready to go riding, but i found out the hard way--now it's a whacked tarbaby with plenty of issues.
First is what came out of the fuel tank--a mixture of fuel, water, organic and inorganic solids. According to the whirled white websticle there are three basic areas of concern in fuels and oil: water, in-organic debris (sand, dust, rust, etc.) and organic debris (fuel breakdown products and waste products of fuel deterioration and re-polymerization). The organic debris represents more than 90% of all the contaminants found in fuels and oil.
Inside the tank there were patches of debris still clinging to the surface, these were vacuumed out and then scrubbed with sandpaper and a steel toothbrush later:
Now the pits were found growing in little farms on the plains, and pinholes were probed and plowed open with an ice pick:
So much for trying to save the paint job:
i'm leaning toward epoxy fill the holes from the outside, then redkote or some polymer to paint over and fill the interior pits and seams and cover the epoxy.