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'86 Mercury 35HP 2-stroke compression
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<blockquote data-quote="airshot" data-source="post: 508758" data-attributes="member: 1183"><p>Look inside that metal tank...look carefully and see if there is any corrosion. If fuel/oil mix is keft in them they normally don't rust or corrode. If no signs of corrosion then by all means use it !! If there is any corrosion then switch to a good quality plastic tank, but make sure there is a vent. If the metal tank has some not to serious corrosion and you want to keep things original, there are coatings for the inside of metal tanks to seal them up and stop corrosion. They work well if done properly. I recomended a plastic tank in an earlier post, but was under the assumption your metal one was corroded.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="airshot, post: 508758, member: 1183"] Look inside that metal tank...look carefully and see if there is any corrosion. If fuel/oil mix is keft in them they normally don't rust or corrode. If no signs of corrosion then by all means use it !! If there is any corrosion then switch to a good quality plastic tank, but make sure there is a vent. If the metal tank has some not to serious corrosion and you want to keep things original, there are coatings for the inside of metal tanks to seal them up and stop corrosion. They work well if done properly. I recomended a plastic tank in an earlier post, but was under the assumption your metal one was corroded. [/QUOTE]
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'86 Mercury 35HP 2-stroke compression
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