--- Doug Norton <e.norton@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Patricia asked for a reply off-line; however, I am a > new club member awaiting delivery of my 1964 Crown > Coupe, which has a small amount of rust. I would > appreciate either an on-line response to her > question or being included in the reply to her. > > Many thanks. This is a GREAT club. The on-line > information is awesome. > > Doug Norton > Dallas, TX > Depends on where the rust is and whether it is surface or cancerous. Cancer usually gets cut or ground out and replaced with a welded replacement, then ground flat and skim coated with body filler. If the part comes off, removal for sandblasting or blasting with something else is one step. You'd need a blaster or cabinet for that. Aluminum Oxide is great in a cabinet for fine machined parts, play sand for the blaster on coarser parts like wheels and suspension parts. Another is to totally immerse the rusted part in vinegar for 24 hours, followed by scrubbing with an SOS pad under the hose, followed by repeated cycles till the metal is virgin looking again. Do not let sit for longer than 24 hours without scrubbing is my experience. Leave outside regarding smell - I used a big tub the size of a large cooler and got a strange look at the checkout stand when I bought out the store on vinegar. Try this on a rusted bolt in a cup first, you'll be amazed. If on the car, use a wire wheel that is sized according to the offending area (down to a dremel tool). Treat with SEM Rust Seal to convert the rust, fill with skim coat of body filler, sand smooth and repaint with an airbrush. The auto paint supply shop can shoot your paint with a spectrometer and mix something to be an "exact" (close, I say) match. Be certain to address the other side of the metal if it's on the bottom of a door or rocker panel or whatever or it'll just return again. POR15 is another option that plenty of others like. I didn't like it as well - too hard to mix and apply, but maybe I had a bad day. Eastwood suppies RUST ENCAPSULATOR. I sprayed that on top of the SEM RUST SEAL on my 196o body that was surface rusted and it's still going fine after 3+ years sitting in the carport without having been sealed by paint (I've been so bad about getting back to that car)... Photos of what I did - pay attention to the drums and the body work: http://imperialclub.com/Yr/1960/Kenyon/Page01.htm Also use ARCHIVE SEARCH on the club website to look up Kerry Pinkerton's Restoration Saga(s) - he did about 4-5 of them and they are incredibly well written stories that will inspire you to try doing it yourself. A better phrased question that says where your rust is might generate a more precise set of replies, but the SEM Rust Seal is one helluva product. RUST MORT is a relative of it that works almost as well, but the SEAL is the best says me. Planning what you'll do to paint/seal the part is also important. Check out Eastwood's Chassis Black for components, or at the least semi-gloss spray paint. -Kenyon Kenyon Wills ____________________________________________________________________________________ Need Mail bonding? Go to the Yahoo! Mail Q&A for great tips from Yahoo! Answers users. http://answers.yahoo.com/dir/?link=list&sid=396546091 ----------------- http://www.imperialclub.com ----------------- This message was sent to you by the Imperial Mailing List. Please reply to mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and your response will be shared with everyone. Private messages (and attachments) for the Administrators should be sent to webmaster@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To UN-SUBSCRIBE, go to http://imperialclub.com/unsubscribe.htm