Rust protection

From BigJimny Wiki
Revision as of 14:11, 19 December 2016 by Bosanek (talk | contribs) (Created page with "= Introduction = If you want to invest in your vehicle's longevity, you need to pay attention to rust. If there is rust, it should be remedied before it gets worse. If there...")
(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Introduction

If you want to invest in your vehicle's longevity, you need to pay attention to rust.

If there is rust, it should be remedied before it gets worse. If there is no rust, it should be remedied while it still has not appeared.

So, scrap and clean the rust from the underbody of the vehicle (if it has rust), and then protect the underbody against future rusting with some good anti-rust material.


General idea

Areas of Jimny which are most susceptible to rust:

  1. Boot / trunk floor
  2. Below the rear seats
  3. Inner wheel arches
  4. Bodywork behind the side plastic mouldings (claddings)
  5. Bodywork behind front driving lights


There are several schools of thought regarding which materials and methods should be used to achieve anti-rust protection.


Some use coatings ("underseals") like bitumen. However, these coatings can hide the rust behind them if the surfaces are not thoroughly cleaned prior to coating application, or if the coating has not been thoroughly applied, so the moisture "creeps" under.


One alternative method is to apply "rust inhibitors". Most of them work on the principle of chemically altering the rust itself, "freezing" it or chemically converting it into another substance. They are usually quite expensive, and typically do not have an effect on non-rusted surfaces (rust must first appear, and then you apply the inhibitor).


There are other alternative methods and substances. Explore on your own.


One of many manufacturers of products which deal with rust is Buzzweld.