Cool bike.
Nice job on the tank.
Trust me, I have filed this in my "good to know" brain cells.
Thanks.
Nice job on the tank.
Trust me, I have filed this in my "good to know" brain cells.
Thanks.
Im with you silverbear, the thinner tin and soldering was how I had thought to do one myself.I think a good bit of money could be saved on the gas tank conversion by skipping the welding. From my experiences working with Tinsmith making in frame gas tanks out of both tin and copper, I think the way to go is by using tin instead of the heavy steel. The tank walls are only as strong as the weakest point, which is determined by the side panels. The top and bottom panels can be of a good quality tin which is easy enough to bend, cut and is inexpensive. The outlet for fuel and the gas filler can be done before the sides, top and bottom panels are soldered together. The panels can be held together prior to soldering with small sheet metal screws. Once the solder is being laid down, remove the sheet metal screws as you go. The solder will fill the drilled screw holes. I would also attach the panels to the inside of the tank with the side panel flanges overlapping the top and bottom panels. That makes it easier to see that you have a good flow sealing things up and doesn't change the fit of the side panels into the frame. We made a number of tanks with tin and several with copper and none of them leaked. No commercial sealer was used. You certainly could use a sealer as a kind of insurance policy since your bikes are for customers, but for your own use if you ever did experience a leak at a solder joint it would be a simple repair.
I think the bike and tank turned out great and would consider buying one of these myself if I didn't have too many bike builds under way already.
SB
Nice Poo-Poo pipes are ~$35 and it would already have one if I didn't have ~$350 into just the tank so far.
$50 for the caswell, $50 for the input/outputs, and $250 to have the local shop make the overkill steel frame the side overs mount to.350? Why so much??!
Even so, it's cool.... I'm trying to think of an easier, less expensive alternative for my huffy Olympia, rather than a penut tank.
The side covers are pressed with a nice 90 ~1/2" all the way around.KC,
I'm sure you're right about the gas tank procedure you've outlined working just fine. I was also thinking that for something like a cantilever frame you could cut out a piece of plywood to the side contour of the frame opening and use it as a form for bending the edges over on a cutout of tin.
I toasted 2 tanks to do mine and gave up on trying to use the filler, there just wasn't enough tank room in the front to easily open and close a filler that big and I didn't want to even wider in front, the thing already holds 6L at that size.Make two to match and you would have the equivalent of what your Columbia came with.
Then follow through with what you have just outlined and a nice, custom fitted tank results for a hundred bucks, or less than that if you were to reuse a gas filler and fittings from a peanut or other gas tank.
Well, solder is a tough gig just to get air tight to begin with and far from free, and that is un-mounted, will it hold up after and couple hundred miles of vibration on a bike with chain guard gauge metal?I would probably still use solder and skip the tank liner because I'm cheap and comfortable with soldering.
Anyway, what you're doing makes a DIY tank feasible and inexpensive.
SB
It would look better too, no need for Bondo type stuff to even the seams.After hundreds of hours soldering leaded glass windows I should have a good feel for working with solder.
If you already have the tools there isn't much expense in the solder or flux and a repair would be simple enough.
Yes it will , and has for better than a hundred years.Well, solder is a tough gig just to get air tight to begin with and far from free, and that is un-mounted, will it hold up after and couple hundred miles of vibration on a bike with chain guard gauge metal?
To be moved along as I have other projects, I dumped a bunch into it already, and I think it pretty awesome as is.The bike needs...
I think that would be cool for someone that just wants to buy a frame for $150 and then spend $1000+ more to add a tank and replace most everything else.seat changed to a 1937 or 1930s leather seat form that time
change the grips and handle bars to 1930s
change the crank and the peddles
removed all the decals on the bike and pin stripe or paint them on
change the wheels to chrome.
And maybe an old chrome headlight on the fender.
And keep everything eles on the bike the same give it more of a 1937 or 1930s look have those parts on the bike factory columbia parts from 1937.
That would look good on the bike.
The bike would look it was made in the 1930s. What do you think.
I used filler necks and caps from power steering reservoirs on one I did.The filler came in.
It could have been bigger, that might be a tight fit for a gas pump nozzle.
I found a British die set but not local and over $40, I'll just sacrifice a tank so I can get the parts up to welder today.
With any luck I'll have it back today or tomorrow.