Well I seem to be moving in slow motion on the little 63 American, but I am moving... Got the gas tank cleaned, repaired, sealed. I think it worked out OK; scraped clean, cut two 5" holes in it, hot-tanked it at a machine shop (after I drained and detergent-washed gasoline out), sanded it inside with 100 grit (I have long arms), screwed and epoxied 16ga patches over the access holes, ground the screwheads nearly off, rinsed with lacquer thinner, then Caswell epoxy sealer. The Caswell stuff wasn't cheap, about $75 (for two kits, it's a big tank), but it worked really well. They warn you have only 20 minutes working time, so I was a bit worried, but for nothing; working time (eg. still runny) was closer to 30 - 40 minutes. Ambient temp was 80 degrees. I stirred the hell out of it, rotated the hell out of the tank so I'm fairly certain it's 100% covered. It took a few hours to harden (had me worried for a bit) but it sure is a tough coating. I did this late afternoon, relatively slow cure all night, then left it out in the sun all weekend. The sender was equally rusty, but that cleaned up OK, surprisingly, and the resistor card and wiper are OK, and it seems to be working fine. I got a float and O-ring kit from Galvin's so I'll be in business shortly. I have 12 good pushrods so the rockers can all go together next. That will complete engine assembly. The gas was badly contaminated, and I haven't changed out the fuel line nor fuel pump. I'm thinking will just crank the engine and run a quart of gas through it to get out the bulk of it. It was all gas-soluable so that ought to do it. Makes me a bit nervous though, maybe I should just change out the whole line. I got all the suspension-repair parts today. I get paid Wednesday so I'll over the bushings then. Then I can drive it and find the NEXT layer of problems...! PS: Why's it so quiet in here? _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://www.amc-list.com/mailman/listinfo/amc-list