Well we went from Winter Saturday, Spring Sunday, and Summer today, how good is that? Now tomorrow is a public holiday to celebrate "The Melbourne Cup", a horse race where your ladies and blokes get absolutely sh1tfaced and make d1cks of themselves for the media, who love to film their antics and plaster it all over the commercial TV channels, oh, and apparently some horses are involved, in the background.
Today being a Monday, most of my Public servant work colleagues take the day off, but "working from home" is so close to having the day off anyway, I elected to "work", so I can take all my leave at Christmas. All I did today was log on, respond to a few emails (other states don't get the day off) and just check back in every 30 minutes or so in case I had a priority job that needed my immediate attention. Sweet.
First job was to do a little more JB Welding to fill the gaps on the inside of the damaged area, just for a little insurance. While I was doing that, I thought it opportune to do the F2 tank as today and tomorrow are really good drying days with temps in the 80's. I took the tank off, and put it on the stand, to completely drain the tank.
CB750F2-K0 Mon 2 Nov 2020 2 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
I was surprised at how much gas I was able to remove, and yes, I know that a full fuel tank has less chance of blowing than one that's almost empty, but as I was gonna be using an electric drill (set to slow to reduce the chance of sparks) I'd rather an explosion from a couple of fluid ounces of fuel than 4 gallons.
CB750F2-K0 Mon 2 Nov 2020 3 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
Back in the day I used to blow up unexploded bombs, and working part time at a gas station, I had access to "out of date" propane BBQ cylinders and the occasional gallon or so of gas to add to say, an unexploded 84mm Carl Gustav ("Charlie Guts-ache") rocket right on dusk (when the range activities had to cease) with a couple of slabs of PE, it would provide a momentary light and sound display that I always found satisfying, but usually pissed off Range Control, who could see the 100 foot flame front from a mile or two away.
But I digress. I used a shiny new step drill to open the front badge pin mounting hole up, then increased the hole size using bigger drill bits up to 10mm.
CB750F2-K0 Mon 2 Nov 2020 5 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
The apparent "bubbling" in the paint is actually just adhesive from the double sided tape that melted when fuel hit it. I've been very carefull to just leave it the fcuk alone since that dreadful day, to give the paint a chance to harden up. I used a right angle seal pick to dig out any crap that was under the badge mounting plate, so I could feed as much JB Weld underneath it, to anchor the stuff in place. I did find a couple of hollow areas when I was picking around, and when I blew compressed air in to blow away any loose stuff, I realised thhat I could hear the air coming back out of the tank?
Wow, so I removed the cap completely, so that when I packed the JB Weld in, I didn't want any air pressure (or gas fumes) pushing air up through the repair, rendering it useless. I used the pick to push the JB weld into all the hollow spaces under the badge bracket, and kept loading the JB Weld in, until I had a little bump over the hole, which dropped a little as it cured in the midday sun. Sweet.
CB750F2-K0 Mon 2 Nov 2020 6 by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr
I had K0 stuff to do, and once I'd had enough for the day I brought the F2 tank back in to the sheltered workshop to spend the evening before I grind off the excess and put the badge back on. More tomorrow.
CB750F2-K0 Mon 2 Nov 2020 9b by
Terry Prendergast, on Flickr