Need help?


Search OutdoorKing-Forum by entering Key Words Below



Who's Online Now
0 members (), 5,692 guests, and 310 robots.
Key: Admin, Global Mod, Mod
Online Spare Parts


Online Store


Newest Topics
Yardking crank case
by Spreefarm - 28/09/25 09:00 AM
Yard King Mower Manuals
by - 23/09/25 01:12 PM
Victa Identification
by RayNewt - 19/09/25 09:28 PM
Mowcart 66
by Willo - 19/09/25 10:41 AM
Ride on rover mower
by Laurie mowing - 16/09/25 02:43 PM
Topic Replies
Yardking crank case
by maxwestern - 29/09/25 08:18 PM
Contessa fan
by mice_elf - 26/09/25 08:58 PM
Yard King Mower Manuals
by Muzho68 - 24/09/25 02:02 PM
Victa Identification
by maxwestern - 20/09/25 10:05 PM
Mowcart 66
by NormK - 20/09/25 12:07 PM
Hello from Vic
by mice_elf - 19/09/25 10:37 PM
Weekend find
by NormK - 16/09/25 05:35 PM
Ride on rover mower
by Laurie mowing - 16/09/25 02:43 PM
Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
Hop To
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 580
Likes: 2
Qualified Senior
I have had a number of Briggs and Stratton quantum mowers that have had split seams in their plastic fuel tanks. It is always around the seam on the engine side. I have tried "plastic welding" with a soldering iron and some scrap plastic. This was unsuccessful or just temporarily successful and may have failed because the two plastics have to be exactly the same. However, I had a friend who said he had his son try and do this and it also failed and he was a professional plastic welder.

I have tried hot melt glue, also a temporary success, I've tried an epoxy mixture that is very strong and works under water etc-too I think it was too rigid and the seam opened up again. I have also tried one of the permatex gasket products and it was totally useless. So I was wondering if any body has had a successful repair on a plastic fuel tank seam and, if so, can they share it with me.

Last edited by CyberJack; 26/09/15 05:42 AM. Reason: Topic Heading
Joined: Sep 2011
Posts: 1,374
know nothing
i have never tried really , almost always have a spare laying around somewhere here as they get beat to death in my neck of the woods , sorry i did try once but same thing lasted maybe a couple of months in season and cracked again but different place .
when i fit them just make it as easy and loose as possible so nothing is stressed then tighten bolts seem to last the life then , often its because the spacer under the 10mm at the rear is dropped when removed then refitted with it missing (stressed) so sure somethings gotta give .

good luck with them though , if you work out a way let us know wink as it never really works for long

cheers , Dave

Joined: Jan 2012
Posts: 1,842
Likes: 14
Moderator
Yep, the filler rod used has to be the same type of plastic, for welding to work.

So it's necessary to look for a type marking, or recycling symbol, on the tank.
The most likely culprits would be PP [polypropylene], HDPE [high density polyethylene], or ABS [acrylonitrile/butadiene/styrene copolymer]. HDPE can't be glued, but the others can, with the right glue and techniques.

That said, the seam design on these doesn't lend itself to being patched up. I'd say they are ultrasonic welded at the factory, but that isn't really available as a repair technique. Any welding/glue just on the outer edge of the seam isn't going to have the strength to last.

It would be necessary to either split the entire seam to get a good glued joint, or cut a vee on the outside with a burr cutter, to get a decent weld, I'd say. Even then, you'd really need a pro-style hot air welding setup to get a good joint - soldering irons just ain't going to work.

For the most common Quantum tank, the #699374, the ODK Shop has them for $46.50, or they are usually on FleaBay Oz for about $57 posted


Cheers,
Gadge

"ODK Mods can explain it to you, but they can't understand it for you..."

"Crazy can be medicated, ignorance can be educated - but there is no cure for stupid..."
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 580
Likes: 2
Qualified Senior
Good stuff. Neither of the purchase options are viable unless you were working on a keeper. I sell most of my mowers for $65 but as you know you can pick up a junk mower for $20 and that's how most of us get our spares of course. You'd think fixing a leaky plastic seam on a tank would be simple. I never considered splitting the whole seam for a better join and I might give it a go next time. I've also got a heat station and also a heat gun. I'll see how much damage I can do with those as well.

Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 1,526
Likes: 23
AVB Offline
SENIOR TECHNICIAN
There is an industrial glue for HDPE plastics available though it is very expensive in small quantities plus you must have the application gun and tips.

Here is a link the product's literature.
ClicK Here

As welding you must keep the temperature within very close tolerances, too little result in poor bonding and too much result the plastic structure being burnt. Also as said before it needs to be a full penetration weld on clean materials. I have weld these tanks for my own use but I prefer to just replace the whenever possible on customers equipment; just not worth the liability.


Last edited by Bruce; 29/01/17 06:09 PM. Reason: Updated Link
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 580
Likes: 2
Qualified Senior
I think the message here is to NOT try and repair them. Sad thing is I bought one last week from the recycle centre for a mower I that did not have a tank (also from the same place. That's the one with the leak and I bet it came off the same damn mower too. Sometimes you can't win.

Joined: Jan 2015
Posts: 1,526
Likes: 23
AVB Offline
SENIOR TECHNICIAN
That also makes the case for them pressure test tank before you buy and leave with it. Here before let the customer have an used I pressure test it so I know it leaves in good condition.

Last edited by AVB; 26/09/15 07:38 PM.
Joined: Jul 2007
Posts: 580
Likes: 2
Qualified Senior
Absolutely!


Moderated by  bigted, Bruce, CyberJack, Gadge, Mr Davis 

Link Copied to Clipboard
Forum Donation
These Outdoorking Forums have helped Thousands of people in finding answers to their equipment questions.

If you have received help, please consider making a donation to support the on-going running cost of these forums.

September
M T W T F S S
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18 19 20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30
ShoutChat
Comment Guidelines: Do post respectful and insightful comments. Don't flame, hate, spam.
Newest Members
Panhead, Nappy12, Brodie410, Blake B, Camdawson
17,605 Registered Users
Forum Statistics
Forums145
Topics12,999
Posts106,900
Members17,605
Most Online16,069
Sep 18th, 2025
OutdoorKing Showcase
20 Bucks from FB Marketplace
20 Bucks from FB Marketplace
by Return Rider, February 20
Victa Cortina 2 Shed Find
Victa Cortina 2 Shed Find
by Return Rider, January 25
My Rover Baron 45
My Rover Baron 45
by Maxwell_Rover_Baron, April 16
SHOWCASE - Precision Mowers - 2021
SHOWCASE - Precision Mowers - 2021
by CyberJack, April 14
SHOWCASE – Atco Rotary – Paul C - 2020
HOME |CONTACT US
Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 8.0.0
(Release build 20240826)
Responsive Width:

PHP: 8.3.25 Page Time: 0.032s Queries: 30 (0.024s) Memory: 0.6565 MB (Peak: 0.7047 MB) Data Comp: Zlib Server Time: 2025-09-29 17:24:03 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS