Monday, February 6, 2012

Classic Car Rust - A Misunderstood Topic

There is not a word in the car enthusiast's vocabulary that evokes additional emotion than the word "rust". It really is the automotive equivalent to "cancer". Rust is poor news, no question. It is also a pretty misunderstood situation, 1 that can be without difficulty dealt with or at least controlled to preserve an otherwise wonderful 'ol rig.


Preservation and Maintenance:


The most significant sort of rust is deep panel rot. The metal truly disintegrates causing holes and other harm. This requires new sheet metal to be grafted into the panel, or total panel replacement. Why does this take place in certain areas and not others? Prolonged exposure to moisture. The bottom of a fender, particularly behind the wheel well is a frequent region. More than the years of becoming driven, dirt and debris accumulates in the bottom of the fender and stays wet, accelerating the rust process. Other common regions are quarterpanels, windshield channels and lower doors. We've all observed rust out.


All cars, regardless of whether restored or just beat up old drivers, can benefit from taking a trip to the Vehicle Wash and pressure washing these places. Put the rig on jackstands, crawl below there and blast that old dirt and debris outta there!! This is the single top thing you can do to preserve whats left of a future project, or keep a finished vehicle preserved.


Dealing With Surface Rust:


Surface rust is in fact minor and can effortlessly be dealt with. It really is just rust colored metal that does not have deep pitting or holes into the pores of the metal. This usually isn't an emergency. The rust/oxidation can be sanded off and a non-porous primer can be applied. Rust Bullet, POR15, or old school epoxy primer can be implemented to encapsulate what molecules of rust remain in the pores of the metal that cannot be sanded out. A inexpensive quick to use material is plain old Rustoleum. Properly performed, this need to treat the rust for fine.


Pitted Metal:


This gets a little extra involved. The rust has penetrated the pores of the metal, but not to the point of rust by means of. There are supplies accessible that treat this especially well. These include phosphoric acid, which dissolves rust. You can brush it on and it will visibly turn the corrosion black. When the wetness of the material goes away, encapsulate with non-porous primer and that functions pretty well. The non-porous primer seals the air/moisture away from the corrosion. The corrosion can't react with no moist air to feed it, so it suffocates the rust, and the rust residue lays dormant under the primer.


Handy tip: Use a power drill with a good sharp bit to nibble away any rusty residue. You will see clean fresh looking metal appear as you grind it out. Affordable and reliable!!


Panel Repair vs. Replacement:


As a rule, the OEM sheetmetal parts are significantly far better stampings than any aftermarket parts. This is why i choose to patch as considerably existing panel as potential rather than replace. The beneficial news is that there is a massive availability of patch and replacement panels, and there is no shame in cutting up a total panel for just a couple of patches to use. Consider twice just before you entirely hack off your '69 Chevelle quarterpanel if it only requirements 25% reworked, cuz the new 1 may not fit up. This sometimes applies with trunk floors. If the center section only is rusted, why invest in a complete trunk floor and discover out that it will not even fit by means of the trunk opening for installation cuz it really is too significant?


Sandblasting:


This is in my opinion an costly impractical process. Most of the rotted ares will be cut out and welded up, and any surface rust can be dealt with chemically. There are a lot of hidden hard to reach areas that can not be gotten to with the blasting equipment, so whats the point? Nibble any rust scale away with a drill bit until the metal looks clean, then hit it with primer. Deep rust can only be partially removed anyway, it really is not possible to get blasting media deep adequate into badly pitted metal to remove each and every molecule of rust, so don't wig out about rust. Any places that do demand blasting can be spot blasted.


Preservation:


It really is safe to assume that if you maintain your car in a clean dry garage, or even beneath a tarp, the weather won't get to it. Do not drive it in the rain, do not leave it outside all winter, and the possibility of rust is zero.


Rust is poor news, but it 'aint nothin' to be 'skeered of.

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