I realize this is pretty old, the thread i mean, I found it looking up klean strip metal prep & etch because I was considering it to clean this tank I am working on. i have tried a lot of other things and they all flash rust pretty quick, even with the oil coat that was mentioned already. Vinegar really does work, apple cider type works best. But i was looking real hard at this tank. it has baffels. It's a Honda CVCC tank. not a bike tank. i do have many Bikes though that I play with so I have had all that sort of experience in tank cleaning already, that was sort of what interested me in this club and this forum in particular. my Bikes ( over 20 ) are are nearly all single cylinder thumpers. all 50's 60's and 70's.
anyway, LOL I tested this metal prep & etch stuff because i was looking for something cheaper to use with the Por 15 product so it didn't cost so much. it worked very well, in fact i think it worked maybe even a little better than the marine clean which is REALLY high dollar compared to Kleen strips product.
so when it cam to this tank , the honda CVCC 1978 tank. after trying so many other things to get this super rare and nasty dirty sob clean. I decided maybe I should do it to this. I tested this stuff where it would be visible to me, i cut away a section of a gallon jug and dropped the old tow chain section I was using as ballast to knock the big rusty stuff loose from inside the tank. it was equally rusty as my tank. I poured about 8 )z in and stirred it up, that chain is spotless right now and I hung it up outside with nothing on it after i rinsed it down and its not rusting.
I have my tank strapped to a hand cart wheel ( Dolly ) right now, with half a gallon of the the metal prep in it, I check it a bit ago.
after talking with the por 15 guys and reading through their PDF files I found that even they only recommend coating a tank when it is the absolute last resort. i have no holes so I am just going to use this tank when the etch is done.
im going to rinse it out and dry it with a heat gun and bolt the sob back on the car and fill it up. I dropped the sending unit in this stuff ( dismantled ) and it not only cleaned it from a solidly Locked up ball of rust and dried up old gas, it freed up the resistor and with a slight scrub with a fingernail brush it works like brand new! no joke. 6 Ohm is full 106 Ohm is bone dry.
i don't know how long the coating of zinc stays on the inside of the tank but the OEM didn't have any coating at all and its lasted all these years so I think this this super cheap metal prep & etch is the way to go. by cheap I mean, a gallon is at most 15 bucks, to do a bike tank you might need 4 OZ to shake around in there and let it set on each side. so I have only used 1/2 a gallon on this car tank which was extreme dirty. I can knock out a few bike tanks with the remainder, super bargain if you ask me.
also, the fumes are minimal, i didn't use gloves but I was careful not to get it on me. seems way more user friendly and the flash rust inhibitor is the real bonus.