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Originally Posted by RV8SQDN
RV-6A,
One rivet weeping......Are you planning on a fix for that? And if so, what is your plan?...... Getting something under the rivet head is going to be very difficult.........
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There are a few options to try in my particular circumstance without tearing into the tank.
#1. Do not fill the tank above 15-16 gallons. I know this works but the single weeper only yields a very small amount of blue dye over a period of several days. It really is no big deal to wipe the dye away. In practice, I routinely top off the tank anyway.
#2. Apply Loctite Threadlocker Green (901?) to the rivet head which I am told sometimes works due to its superior wicking powers. I may try that sometime, if I ever get the tank really dry.
#3 Apply a vacuum to the tank to "suck" proseal in from the outside. Apparently this has been done successfully many times.
#4. At AirVenture this year, I was amazed to spot an RV-6A with a blind rivet protruding from the exact same hole location as my weeper. What do you suppose the odds of that are? You can bet it was installed to deal with a weeper. This is a very common fix. Still, a protruding rivet just isn't my thing.
Builders sometimes cut access holes into the rear baffle to deal with bad leaks or in the case of older RV's....peeling slosh. I really don't see removing
the tank and going through all that just to address one single rivet.
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A day or so after I wrote those comments, using eyeball effort alone I mixed what I guessed to be an approximate 10-1 by weight dollop of sealer from what is left in a can of oh-so-long expired proseal purchased from Van in 2000. I applied a dab of it over the head of that weeping rivet and worked a popsicle stick back and forth over the area in an effort to shove some of the sealer underneath the less than perfectly seated rivet head. When in my imaginings I was reasonably sure I did as much as possible under the circumstances, I left the sealer glob to cure in place over the rivet and continued to fly the plane several times over the next few days. Later, I cleaned off the excess sealer from around the area and noticed a distinct halo of proseal remains around the perimeter of the noted weeper. The minimalist effort seems to have worked because since that time with the fuel tank constantly filled to the max, no traces of tell-tale dye have yet emerged from under that rivet. I?d rather be lucky than smart. As a back-up plan, I did manage to locate and purchase some very hard to find -1 grip length flush head Cherry rivets (CR9162-4-1) from Bon-Aero. At this point, my gut tells me it will not be necessary to eventually replace that rivet but as in all things, time will ultimately tell.