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Wow I dont know about you guys but im pumped!!!

Just finished loading up the car and heading to Sydney first thing in the morning with Roy.

Been testing for the last couple of days so fingers crossed all the little gremlins have f**ked off.

These gremlins include 2 turbos and an eletrical fire destroying most of the engine loom.

Nothing like adversity to make race day all the more rewarding :stupid:

See you all on the weekend.

Adam (Red R32)

Ken oath - I will be there with an umbrella - not for the rain, but to be a pit girl for anyone interested!

ahhaha

:laughing-smiley-014:

Yeah cause you look awesome in a skirt :stupid:

I will be the weather girl :D :

Saturday

Chance morning shower.

City: Min: 9 Max: 17

West: Min: 5 Max: 17

sold your entry but didnt make yourself crew for the new entrant...silly boy

Who says i didnt. Who says the ticket was for me and not someone else?

Ill see you there tomorrow

Yep,,,not the smartest kid on the block.

Now pay at the gate like every other specy ya tight arse.

Neil.

Isnt there a rotary that needs some spark plugs changed?

things are happening. everyone is honing in on sydney. it's going to be good.

fatz, bring cans for me too mate. none of that guiness shit either or you walk home buddy.

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    • It's sodium citrate, I misspoke earlier. It's a citrate buffer solution. And yes, depending on how thin the metal in the tank is this may or may not be a wise decision but if it's just mild rust it should clean off and it should be fine. 
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    • The sodium acetate, mixed with citric acid, doesn't actually buffer each other. Interestingly though, if you used Sodium Acetate, and acetic acid, THAT becomes a buffer solution. Additionally, a weak acid that can attack a metal, is still a weak acid that can attack a metal. If you don't neutralise it, and wash it off, it's going to be able to keep attacking. It works the same way when battery acid dries, get that stuff somewhere, and then it gets wet, and off it goes again breaking things down. There's a reason why people prefer a weak acid, and it's because they want TIME to be able to be on their side. IE, DIY guys are happy to leave some mild steel in vinegar for 24 hours to get mill scale off. However, if you want to do it chemically in industry, you grab the muriatic acid. If you want to do it quicker at home, go for the acetic acid if you don't want muriatic around. At the end of the day, look at the above thumbnail, as it proves what I said in the earlier post, you can clean that fuel tank up all you want with the solution, but the rust that has now been removed was once the metal of the fuel tank. So how thin in spots is your fuel tank getting? If the magazine on the left, is the actual same magazine as on the right, you'll notice it even introduces more holes... Well, rust removal in general actually does that. The fuel tank isn't very thick. So, I'll state again, look to replace the tank, replace the fuel hanger, and pump, work out how the rust and shit is making it past the fuel filter, and getting into the injectors. That is the real problem. If the fuel filter were doing its job, the injectors wouldn't be blocked.
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