Five3brian
TYF Newbie
- Joined
- Jun 15, 2024
- Posts
- 7
- Reaction score
- 10
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Will definitely try that, i appreciate it. So far i’ve took a spray bottle and squirted transmission fluid inside the door plugs and in the fenders a bit, so hopefully that’ll help slow body rust down too.I'd start by poking around everywhere on the frame with a screw driver and see if you can find any soft spots. If there's no soft spots I'd clean it up with a wire wheel the best you can and either por 15 or even rustoleum rust converter as much as you can. Also pickup a bunch of fluid film and spray it inside all the holes in the frame and also anywhere you can't apply the rust converter.
Never thought of that! ThanksNo telling from our computer screens' perspective TBH.
If you can find a spec on what the thickness of the frame is, you can try hitting a spot with a flap disc and check the thickness with some dial calipers. That will tell you how much section loss has occurred.
I don't have to deal with road salt on vehicles here, but this is what I do when assessing corrosion on steel structures (mostly buildings.)
Good luck.
^this that stuff adds up probably trans lines tooBe aware the brake and fuel lines that run along the fuel tank and the line across in the front get crusty. Make all those repairs before you make a mess with the Fluid-film.