This is Why You NEVER Want to Use Rubberized Undercoatings!

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 21 окт 2024
  • In this video we show you a perfect example why you don't want to use rubberized undercoatings like Ziebart!
    Instead use a product that breathes like Woolwax or Fluid Film-
    amzn.to/2KFBvpV
    Here is how to apply it-
    • Undercoating Your Vehi...
    My Company BSG Automotive offers Auto Repair services in the greater Chicagoland area.
    Website:
    www.bsgautomoti...
    Facebook:
    / bsgautomotive
    Catch up with us on-
    Facebook: / fordtechmakuloco
    Twitter: / fordtechmak
    Instagram: / fordtechmakuloco
    My company RUclips Channel- BSG Automotive providing repair advice on makes and models other than Ford: / bsgautomotive1
    Disclaimer:
    The information, demonstration and any content contained in this video is for informational purposes only. The user and BSG Automotive (hereinafter “FordTechMakuloco”) makes no warranty, express or implied, regarding the effectiveness or safety of the contents of this video. In no way should the contents of the video, including the tools used, be repeated or tried by anyone. Viewers should only seek the help of a trained professional located at a licensed auto repair shop for any fix, modification, alteration, or any change to their vehicle. FordTechMakuloco shall not be liable for any injury, damage, or loss to any person or property that may result from use of the tools, equipment, or any content contained in this video. In addition, there is no way to guarantee that the video is not altered or modified or is not in the final form submitted by FordTechMakuloco and therefore, FordTechMakuloco does not warrant that the video is unaltered or not modified. The links on this video to products are for informational purposes only and in no way are an endorsement of the safety or effectiveness of the particular product. Viewers understand that anything contained in this video or linked to or from this video is the sole responsibility of the viewer and in no way provides an express or implied warranty as to the safety or effectiveness of any linked tool, product, or video. Therefore, viewer agrees to release, waive, and discharge FordTechMakuloco or anyone affiliated with FordTechMakuloco, from any and all liability, claims, demands, actions, and causes of action whatsoever arising out of or related to any loss, damage, or injury, including death, that may be sustained by the viewer, or to any property belonging to viewer, regardless of whether the loss is linked to the use of the contents of this video, or otherwise and regardless of whether such liability arises in tort, contract, strict liability, or otherwise, to the fullest extent allowed by law.

Комментарии • 1,1 тыс.

  • @FordTechMakuloco
    @FordTechMakuloco  4 года назад +63

    Instead use a product that breathes like Woolwax or Fluid Film-
    amzn.to/2KFBvpV
    Here is how to apply it-
    ruclips.net/video/W06WX6JRGM8/видео.html

    • @dhmcc9882
      @dhmcc9882 4 года назад +2

      FordTechMakuloco Any experience with Krown?

    • @markskare9907
      @markskare9907 4 года назад

      You must be spot on because youre about the fourth on that said the thing. One even said he refuses to work on under coated vehicles.

    • @johnpatillo5203
      @johnpatillo5203 4 года назад +3

      Sad to see a nice looking truck going to scrap already

    • @markskare9907
      @markskare9907 4 года назад +1

      John Patillo I honestly believe and use the still in certain places beings I drive on a lot of gravel roads, but I would never do a whole truck like that, I seen a video where a guy would put or spray auto trans fluid in bottom of rocker panels and doors but not too sure about that either. Gets sticky and collects more dirt and holds more moisture.

    • @taunuslunatic404
      @taunuslunatic404 4 года назад

      @FordTechMakuloco What about Miracle Paint?

  • @joeyz2k
    @joeyz2k 4 года назад +365

    So sad bc this guy thought he was actually protecting his vehicle all these years meanwhile it actually destroyed it

    • @thomassteele1728
      @thomassteele1728 4 года назад +36

      2472 times he parked farther away so some kid wouldnt dent up his truck.... didnt matter. So sad.

    • @akbychoice
      @akbychoice 4 года назад +43

      Thomas Steele you can park as far away from everyone every time, with no vehicles within 10 spaces of you and someone will park right next to you.

    • @joseph401
      @joseph401 4 года назад +21

      @@akbychoice Its amazing, it happens to me all the time. I park way out where no cars are and sure enough, I come out and someone is parked right next to me. Drives me bananas.

    • @noblsht
      @noblsht 4 года назад +4

      It's not just this guy all kinds of people have had this done to their cars for many years and they're still doing it still doing it all over the place "1puglife" from Ontario Canada does this for a living in his driveway he has a RUclips channel he doesn't know what he's doing and neither do the people who are having this put on their cars

    • @jeremysmith-mp7nu
      @jeremysmith-mp7nu 3 года назад +1

      He can always get a new frame so it doesn't matter. It's not like new frames are that expensive.

  • @nathanielrice6499
    @nathanielrice6499 4 года назад +40

    Thank you for taking time to make a video about this scam/misconception. To anyone attempting to prevent rust try Transtar amber rustproofing or similar cavity wax sprayed with a wand in every hole, cavity, access plug, pinch weld, frame rail etc. you can find as soon as you leave the dealership lot. Then use a carwash that has high pressure undercarriage sprayer every couple of months.You'll never have a rust issue. If you must use a coating after surface rust has occurred then knock loose stuff away with wire brush. Spray household degreaser. Then pressure wash with dawn dish soap, rinse and let completely dry. Then apply por-15 with squirt bottle and brush to all areas where rust presents itself inside and out. I've had excellent success with these methods on numerous vehicles. Also the most common problem I see is dirt and debris in areas like wheelhouse, fenders, behind mud guards and fender liners, rockets, wiper cowls, bumper reinforcements, etc. Dirt holds moisture and creates perfect environment for body rot. Occasionally taking a water hose and/ or compressed air to clean out these areas will help dramatically. Just my $.02 from spending the last 20 years in a body shop.

    • @davidwhittaker9511
      @davidwhittaker9511 2 года назад

      Nathaniel, thank for this. We live in South West Ontario, Canada right smack in the middle of Great Lakes, High accumulations of Lake Effect Snow from Lake Huron, Georgian Bay, Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, we also get Lake Effect snow from the South West Lake Michigan and Lake Superior. Our Snow fall accumulation is heavy, our municipalities cover the roads 1000's of tons of corrosive salt and chemicals. It almost a crime to purchase a new vehicle, drive in the winter and drive it in these conditions. Thank you for your post, very comprehensive and makes sense. We have learned and agree you have a methodology that works very successfully to save and prevent body and frame rot. Thank You!

    • @wanglee21
      @wanglee21 2 года назад +1

      Por-15 is meant to erode with UV. Not sure if this is a good option long term just like the video said. New yes but with time... big ? marks.

    • @Crowbar381
      @Crowbar381 4 месяца назад

      So in your experience using wax or cosmoline that sets hard (semi hard) isn’t as bad as the rubber in this vid ?
      I’ve heard people say that because it sets, it behaves the same as the undercoating in this vid.
      Eg rust and moisture gets underneath it and creeps underneath it making things worse.
      I have zero experience with using either type of product, so it’s good hearing from someone that does have that knowledge

    • @frankphoto2
      @frankphoto2 Месяц назад

      There are a couple different products from Por 15. Its prep intensive. i have seen vids where rust comes through the por 15 Barrier . its seems to be a very tough paint essentially. So far in my quest for a rust proofing in the rust belt. it appears surface shield is a winner applying every two or three years. or a acid based wash that creates a bonded shield like rust-oleum rust reformer. read about a test from Louisiana metal restoration specialists that had that RRR product be a winner.

  • @timothycc711
    @timothycc711 4 года назад +17

    They need to start making public service announcements from Brian's videos. I mean he is soo good at being a preventive maintenance technician. I am so happy that he is a Ford tech and makes these videos.

  • @UberLummox
    @UberLummox 4 года назад +8

    The perfect opportunity to tell people to hose out their frame and all after every winter woulda been this video.
    Good advice about undercoating for sure.

    • @Dan-su1zq
      @Dan-su1zq 4 года назад +1

      UberLummox I hose mine off every Saturday lol

  • @jpsgarage
    @jpsgarage 4 года назад +52

    I go to school up north and every year when I am home for the summer, I wire brush all of the rust from the frame, and then spray 2 coats of Rust-Oleum "Rust Reformer" paint and then add 3-4 layers of the Krylon rust protector paint. It works exceptionally well and will make your truck look brand new (or at least the frame). Haven't had any rust problems since except for minor surface rust which I just sand off and coat again.

    • @amneziaxeaster-gaming382
      @amneziaxeaster-gaming382 2 года назад +4

      It's probably because every year you sanded de rust before applying the coating

    • @EdsPlace
      @EdsPlace 2 года назад +2

      @@amneziaxeaster-gaming382 de rust how? Sandblast? I have this rubberized crap on mine. I figure just knock off the loose and do this or maybe ospho and coat?

    • @NjoyMoney
      @NjoyMoney Год назад +4

      If you have to redo it every year, it doesnt work well at all.

    • @myrongaines5542
      @myrongaines5542 Год назад +1

      ​@@NjoyMoneySadly, he doesn't realize this.

    • @NjoyMoney
      @NjoyMoney Год назад

      @@myrongaines5542 fresh and fit 😎

  • @Aersix105
    @Aersix105 4 года назад +223

    I just wanna hear what the customer said when you told him

    • @chrisstromberg6527
      @chrisstromberg6527 3 года назад +17

      Why so you can enjoy someone else’s misery?

    • @rubdulbah3201
      @rubdulbah3201 3 года назад +2

      Customer states? Ha ha.

    • @mymidgetbae184
      @mymidgetbae184 3 года назад +4

      Damn you gotta be sad to have bliss in other's misfortune

    • @Steve83
      @Steve83 3 года назад +3

      @@chrisstromberg6527 What makes you think the truck owner would care? He didn't care about the fender rusting through. Clearly, he neglects the truck, and that's what happens. I'm not laughing at the guy, but I'm not crying for him either.

    • @WKLNETWORK
      @WKLNETWORK 7 месяцев назад

      Customer just said OMFG

  • @JunkXXXFood
    @JunkXXXFood 3 года назад +6

    Oh my god. I was literally going to apply this to my 4Runner yesterday. Thanks for the video! Good advice.

  • @yrdGBA
    @yrdGBA 4 года назад +11

    I have been a autobody technician for 38 years and I can tell you that vehicle will rust down regardless ,weather you use undercoat or not. Its the poor quality of the steel that is used by the manufacturer and lack of corrosion protection at the factory. If they last forever, you dont have to buy a new one. On the other hand, you are correct about the undercoat trapping moisture and accelerating the rusting process.

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 года назад +2

      Have you ever tried the motor oil coating? Motor oil contains a lot of corrosion inhibitors that are meant to protect the inside of the engine, but also protect the car body and frame.

    • @Aerogrow
      @Aerogrow 2 года назад +1

      f150's 2010-2014 area = as I dived into the issues; most of it was bad engineering and cheaping out.
      1. bed sides trap salt/mud/oil inside the foam panel bond crap; can you say paint bubbles
      2. Door sills that sit on top of frame rail fill with mud/salt/etc... If you pull off the front mud flap; take a look at what is stuffed in there. Was shocked.
      Why most of the f150s have rust on bed sides and underneath doors / top of frame. It is actually rusting from inside out.

    • @Twolves2005
      @Twolves2005 2 года назад

      @@Aerogrow do you think Ford improved this on the new models ?

    • @Aerogrow
      @Aerogrow 2 года назад

      @@Twolves2005 2016+ fairly sure they switched to aluminum.
      I'd probably still check those areas are not full of road gunk.

    • @frankphoto2
      @frankphoto2 Месяц назад

      buy a Toyota there's a good reason there harder to find used. they do a better job at rust proofing. I got to wonder why the auto makers don't offer a factory rust proofing package/option for the rust belt and Canada for those of us that want to hang onto our $ 60,000 truck. ??? Had a 2007 jeep wrangler eaten by rust up here in north Jersey where brine and salt are used heavily.

  • @mjones2305
    @mjones2305 4 года назад +2

    The rot right through the frame rails is unbelievable.Thank you for posting this video.

  • @wanglee21
    @wanglee21 2 года назад +3

    Good thing I watched this before buying those coating! Thank you!!!

  • @yankumarrah
    @yankumarrah 4 года назад +73

    Ziebart is the true definition of false economy.

  • @frankgonzalez24
    @frankgonzalez24 4 года назад +4

    Not having to undercoat my rides every year is one reason I'm glad I live in the south. Where I live (El Paso, Tx) gets so little snow that when it does, it's either all gone by the end of the day or the city throws dirt on the roads before it does snow to help with it melting and traction. Also, we don't have to switch from summer tires to winter tires. We use all season tires year round. All my cars all over 10 years old have less rust on them than most 3 year old northern cars.

    • @ladin425
      @ladin425 4 года назад

      Northeast is the worst for rust. Other places have winter weather but the northeast uses the most ice melt than anywhere else. Look at Oregon and Washington cars. They get inclament weather all winter long but the local roads don't use salt as much. There cars are in better condition than Cali cars because they don't get beaten up by the sun. Northeast is too congested and people don't know how to drive so the government is forced to use tons of salt every wimter

  • @beezertwelvewashingbeard8703
    @beezertwelvewashingbeard8703 4 года назад +63

    "There's a sucker born every minute."
    -P.T. Barnum
    -Ziebart

    • @rustywrench500
      @rustywrench500 4 года назад +2

      And we're gonna take them for everything they got.

    • @mrc1062
      @mrc1062 4 года назад +1

      Barnum never really said that. A competitor actually said that about Barnum

  • @jmurphy1973
    @jmurphy1973 4 года назад +13

    Eric O. had a great video on these types of undercoating, too. I've never had a frame rust away (I'm in Iowa) and the only thing I've ever applied is a generous dose of water at a car wash, especially during winter months.

    • @ScrapFarm
      @ScrapFarm 4 года назад +2

      For sure that's the best way spray it off after every snowstorm and spend more time under than on top.. I'm working on a Nissan right now it's pretty bad way way worse than this truck that's for sure check it out if you want

    • @kenj.8897
      @kenj.8897 10 месяцев назад

      Good way to activate the salt in there hiding in the crevices .

  • @ManlyPastry
    @ManlyPastry 4 года назад +20

    Anecdotally, these coatings are OK when applied at the factory before any moisture can get trapped between the coating and the frame. I have a (southern) 1985 300ZX with the original rubbery undercoating on the frame rails and floor pan and it's held up fine by itself over the years. Still, I wouldn't put rubber underseal on a car that has any rust or moisture whatsoever already on it.

    • @VIPK9
      @VIPK9 2 года назад +3

      factory still will rust. Cadillac use to have this as an option and they recalled it.

  • @Andrew-rb4gs
    @Andrew-rb4gs 4 года назад +155

    It's like putting a foot with a wet sock inside a rubber boot. Rots from the inside out..lol.

    • @Bloodbain88
      @Bloodbain88 4 года назад +11

      That's a good analogy.

    • @seankennedy5502
      @seankennedy5502 4 года назад +3

      Yes rotten and stinking ! 😂

    • @Mishakol1290
      @Mishakol1290 3 года назад +1

      It actually probably works if you prep the area you spray first so it sticks. Applying it to rusty or dusty/dirty spots is probably why it failed. Most or many cars already have rubberized coating on the bottom.

    • @user-ws3sl9xi7y
      @user-ws3sl9xi7y 2 года назад

      But what if done before the sock gets wet?

    • @user-ws3sl9xi7y
      @user-ws3sl9xi7y 2 года назад +1

      @@Mishakol1290 And yes, at my dealership we degrease the bottom, dry it off and let it sit, then spray the frame.

  • @MotorCityMechanic
    @MotorCityMechanic 4 года назад +24

    Sooooooo glad I live in the south. Down here that stuff would melt off in the summers lol.

    • @dendemron3744
      @dendemron3744 4 года назад +1

      Thanks for posting this...I would have fell for the come-on from the company. Great public service announcement. 👍

    • @johnpatillo5203
      @johnpatillo5203 4 года назад +1

      Took the words right out of my mouth

    • @FordTechMakuloco
      @FordTechMakuloco  4 года назад +20

      Oh stop it! I don't want to hear about your rust free vehicles down there right now!! lol

    • @johnpatillo5203
      @johnpatillo5203 4 года назад +1

      @@FordTechMakuloco lmao

    • @ponydriver77
      @ponydriver77 4 года назад +3

      @@FordTechMakuloco better you guys up north than us here in the south ... we dont need to worry about salt rusting our trucks out ... rarely we get snow ... 02 f250 crew cab 8'bed with 365k ... NO RUST

  • @aeyb701
    @aeyb701 3 года назад +8

    My dad used Ziebart on both our cars back in 1971. That was in Ontario, and rust protection was relatively new. Smelled like hot roofing tar, and had the same thing as what happened to this fellow’s F150. I now use either Rust Check or Krown. Anything that creeps and penetrates. Drilling holes in the doors and rockers is a small price compared to the scourge of rust holes. Even used motor oil sprayed everywhere does wonders, but is of course darker staining on driveways.

    • @josephfilm73
      @josephfilm73 Год назад

      Ziebart tidybart undercoating rulz!! It covers up all the bad! I love rust!

  • @shawng7902
    @shawng7902 2 года назад +6

    My dad just perfected his bees wax spray coating technique. Cheap and pretty durable. Seems to wick well into seems. Plus you can remove it fairly easy and apply again if you need to work on frame brackets.

  • @KorrFur-Old
    @KorrFur-Old 4 года назад +10

    I'm so glad that I saw this video. I went to Ziebart for the first time in May 2020 for a Rhino Liner. They sprayed it on and I only had one minor issue with it that they quickly repaired perfectly. I declined the undercoating from them multiple times. They really try hard to push the undercoating and I think I told them "No" at least 15 times during my 2 visits. They said they will no longer honor the warranty on the Rhino Liner if I refused to have the undercoating. I did not get the undercoating and I'm so happy I didn't.

    • @dubsbarry9963
      @dubsbarry9963 2 года назад

      Thanks for this info. So, (and I'm assuming this) rubberized undercoatings and bed liners aren't virtually the same thing? I bought a can of rustoleum undercoating and was horrified at how quickly it scuffed off shortly after painting. And i prepped really well. However, i previously had great results with Duplicolor Bed Liner Spray. The store was out of bed liner so i picked up the undercoating thinking it would be the same. That's a big negative as far as i can tell.

    • @dubsbarry9963
      @dubsbarry9963 2 года назад +1

      OK, I've answered my own question. I just easily removed the undercoating, after 3 days no less, and i repainted the area with the bedliner spray, which is also rustoleum brand. No comparison whatsoever. The bedliner is 1000 times more durable

    • @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885
      @voidisyinyangvoidisyinyang885 5 месяцев назад

      I went to Ziebart and asked for JUST their Rust Converter treatment. I wanted to see if it did anything. It was just tannic acid and nope - did next to nothing. They got mad when I said I didn't want the undercoating. hahahhaa. I used phosphoric acid - and RP-342. I even got a repair kit welded on - and used other wax spray for undercoating. I even used epoxy appliance paint and chassis saver. I just applied a DIY undercoating of Petrolatum wax from toilet wax rings - 3 lbs - and 4 lbs of pure gum turpentine (it leaves a rosin undercoating)....

  • @macintoshsmith4734
    @macintoshsmith4734 4 года назад +5

    Wow! I bought a used 2007 Ford Edge with a very rusty bottom. I crawled beneath and wire brush, scrubbed out much of the loose rust. Then sprayed the bottom of the vehicle using Rustoleum Undercoating. I’m obviously gonna need to monitor the condition after every winter season. I love this vehicle, and I hope I won’t need to junk it too soon. This situation is freaking scary!

    • @chrisao1987
      @chrisao1987 2 года назад +3

      You want have this issue unless you live in the rust belt. I have a undercoated truck that’s 16 years old and the frame is like new. These rust belt states there just isn’t anything that’s going to save it from rusting. It’s eats everything even this rubber coating.

  • @chrisbroesky2932
    @chrisbroesky2932 4 года назад +6

    I actually use something similar but homemade. I take a tube of red and tacky grease, put it in a pot with half a wax toilet ring, melt and mix it together and paint it on inside of panels. Lasts for years and doesn't dry up. This is after I flush out inside of panels of all the dirt mud and crap in them. No more rotted out wheel wells and cab corners! Fluid film works great for hard to reach areas. The trick is don't use anything that dries and hardens like paint, undercoating included.

  • @dadsvespa
    @dadsvespa 4 года назад +2

    I came up with a "fix' for rotted frames, or frames close to rusting out. I had an old 50's car. Frame had some issues. I plugged ALL the holes in the boxed sections. Bought the strongest apoxy I could find. I settled on a marine apoxy. drove some re-bar into the hollow areas, then filled the entire frame with the apoxy ! lol. It was a farmers fix, took over 4 gallons, but the frame is as solid as a rock ! I ground off the areas that dripped through and put a coat of rust eliminator over the frame. The frame is still solid after many years...so I didn't have to junk it. There are ways to save a good running vehicle, if you don't care about value, or looks, or restoration. Save those junks ! Drive them into the ground ! (before I settled on apoxy, I was going to try high strength concrete !) haha...peace

    • @gregorymalchuk272
      @gregorymalchuk272 4 года назад

      What kind of car was it? Was the re-bar steel or fiberglass? Did you use a pump to get the epoxy into the frame?

  • @johnDingoFoxVelocity
    @johnDingoFoxVelocity 4 года назад +9

    you also have to consider how the rubberized coating acts with road salt depending on where you live will depend on the results you get I have seen road salt turn rubberized coating into rubberized acid it speeds up corrosion and eats the heck out of a car lol

    • @nathanielrichardson294
      @nathanielrichardson294 3 года назад +1

      My brother and I both had 2007 rangers. Mine was under coated from day one. We drive same roads daily through Northern Vt winters. And my frame is in munch better shape. His is rotted out and needs to be replaced. While mine has one spot that is repairable and will pass inspection again. But have seen times where if done wrong will cause worse scenarios

  • @kevinlesch9656
    @kevinlesch9656 4 года назад +4

    I had a Ford salesman tell me for years he recommended this type of undercoat now he doesn't because he saw too many tradeins like this. I take that as an honest salesman, at least as honest as a salesman can be!

  • @onenikkione
    @onenikkione 4 года назад +85

    The money he spent going to Ziebart for the last 10 years if saved up could of went on the down payment on a new Truck!!!

    • @vapecatt
      @vapecatt 4 года назад

      Never get a down payment.

    • @fauxbro1983
      @fauxbro1983 4 года назад +10

      @@vapecatt oh so youre one of those 0 down broke fools

    • @JingleBop
      @JingleBop 4 года назад +10

      @@fauxbro1983 pay for it outright

    • @foxtride7890
      @foxtride7890 4 года назад +6

      @@JingleBop dont you think if people could outright buy it they would? No one wants car payments.

    • @mr.slaphappy3794
      @mr.slaphappy3794 4 года назад +9

      @@foxtride7890 That's why I stick to old cars.

  • @democrat7441
    @democrat7441 9 месяцев назад +2

    Dodge in 1970's wanted to give it's D200 trucks a long service life. They used galvanized steel. I still have original paint on undercarriage. It's galvanized steel from factory.

  • @herbwilkerson953
    @herbwilkerson953 4 года назад +99

    I don’t think I would put that on my lift . Lol.

    • @FordTechMakuloco
      @FordTechMakuloco  4 года назад +51

      The things I do for my fans!

    • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
      @billgateskilledmyuncle23 4 года назад +10

      There is plenty of sidewall since it's fully boxed.

    • @UberLummox
      @UberLummox 4 года назад +2

      @@billgateskilledmyuncle23 Yes exactly. And if it wasn't boxed in the first place, it wouldn't have rusted there.

    • @billgateskilledmyuncle23
      @billgateskilledmyuncle23 4 года назад +1

      @@UberLummox not exactly, they put a bunch of drain holes in those frames, the rubber undercoating clogged them.

    • @0xsergy
      @0xsergy 4 года назад +2

      @@UberLummox my 98 sidekick has a frame more solid than that with similar mileage and that thing has been submerged in mud more times than I can count, fully boxed. Factory protection, I never bothered with anything since the mud scrapes it off quick. I'm in canada so plenty of salt

  • @wildbill1
    @wildbill1 3 года назад +1

    PB blaster has a new one out called Surface Shield which is much like fluid film. That’s the route I’m taking on my 2021 GMC Sierra.

  • @mrlibowski493
    @mrlibowski493 4 года назад +142

    Too bad he didn't have the massive oil leak sooner. Poor man's undercoating.

    • @diesel6916
      @diesel6916 4 года назад +16

      hot oil under spaying is the best. Coming from a rust belt VT

    • @A-mechanics-review-4U
      @A-mechanics-review-4U 4 года назад +14

      Mr Libowski I’m still laughing but you’re right honest my grandpa used to save his used motor oil and spray it on everything from the frame of his truck to all the fences that were wood in the yard

    • @JoseGarcia-ni2lq
      @JoseGarcia-ni2lq 4 года назад

      Mr Libowski 😂 😂 😂

    • @Jack-ox9iz
      @Jack-ox9iz 4 года назад

      Probably bought that truck and couple more years.

    • @dr.samsung_8855
      @dr.samsung_8855 4 года назад

      @@A-mechanics-review-4U And that protects stuff???

  • @jasonrobbind231
    @jasonrobbind231 3 года назад +1

    I have a 2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser and have been using fluid film every other year and it still looks like new under there

  • @unclemarksdiyauto
    @unclemarksdiyauto 4 года назад +28

    I feel bad for the owner. They thought they were doing a good thing! Thanks for the warnings!

    • @DJGeorgeDisco
      @DJGeorgeDisco Год назад

      the law of unintended consequences

    • @unclemarksdiyauto
      @unclemarksdiyauto Год назад

      @@DJGeorgeDisco So true! I have seen a few videos NOT suggesting rubberized under coatings! It makes sense now that I have heard the logic.

  • @jothain
    @jothain 4 года назад +15

    Greets from Finland. I totally agree on this. Here we have also quite heavy salt usage on winters and I've seen dozens of cars that have been destroyed pretty much solely because hardened corrosion inhibitors just like this car. Best coatings seem to be ones that remain almost fluid or wax like. Anyway stiff and hardening coatings always seem to have results like this. Sure they look really nice initially, but that's it and it always seems to be the case that damages are seen too late.

    • @tafl-9198
      @tafl-9198 4 месяца назад

      Do you have Dinitrol, SUVO and PAWA in your area ?
      Any experience with these ?

  • @MostlyOutdoors
    @MostlyOutdoors 4 года назад +49

    Fluid film it every year is the way to go.

    • @triedandtrue1820
      @triedandtrue1820 4 года назад +2

      Use Krown in Canada, real protection and lubes everything

    • @0xsergy
      @0xsergy 4 года назад +8

      @@triedandtrue1820 FF is used by canadian military. good enough for me

    • @DetroitLions1984
      @DetroitLions1984 4 года назад

      Never heard of that but I already undercoated vehicles my self with that rubber undercoating. Can I use this fluid film over that rubber crap or No?

    • @andyeckel7195
      @andyeckel7195 4 года назад +2

      Detroit Lions No! You need to scrape off the rubber coating, every square inch of it. Your salted road winters and DIY rubber coating = very short frame life

    • @ogalief
      @ogalief 3 года назад +1

      Fluid Film and Corrosion Free are definitely the best. My 15 year old car has been winter driven since new and sprayed with that stuff every year. Looks almost new underneath. Where I live, I've seen 10 year old cars in the junkyard due to rust

  • @MyHMMWVaddiction
    @MyHMMWVaddiction 4 года назад +3

    I liked your previous video. I'm a firm believer in Fluid Film. I applied to my 2017 SD twice a year. My truck sits a lot. Not one spec of rust. I spray everything. The usual oxidation on trans and transfer case are not present. The rusty out of box Rancho shocks are like new. I would suggest people drive down a dirt road after applying fluid film. The dust sticks to make it tougher to wash off. 👍

    • @workingshlub8861
      @workingshlub8861 4 года назад +1

      same here....got a 2001 ram that i plow with and its sits rest of the year....guy i bought it from fluid filmed each year and i continued ..just surface rust on frame.. the fenders is another story though probably gonna need to replace in spring..inspection let me slide this year....

  • @prestonsimmons7863
    @prestonsimmons7863 4 года назад +125

    I can see a used car salesman still making 8 grand off of this lol

    • @mopar21
      @mopar21 4 года назад

      Not quite that much.

    • @juancontre5858
      @juancontre5858 4 года назад

      Maybe in another state in t l at state were is at has to pass the safety inspection that is safe tu o be on the road

    • @jamesalan5831
      @jamesalan5831 4 года назад +9

      Unknown User yeah will just spray it again and get 11 grand for it

    • @chickenricesteak541
      @chickenricesteak541 4 года назад

      Then law suits will occur.

    • @EastDallasKicks
      @EastDallasKicks 4 года назад

      @@mopar21 actually yes

  • @NoNonsenseKnowHow
    @NoNonsenseKnowHow 4 года назад +1

    Wow thats crazy! He must have been following brine trucks around! lol. My 1996 Ram was undercoated years ago with the same type stuff and its holding up good. I hit it with fluid film once in a blue moon still though

  • @ozzstars_cars
    @ozzstars_cars 4 года назад +57

    I remember in the 80's when that rubber undercoating crap became all the rage.

    • @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg
      @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg 4 года назад +13

      Lets take a moment to remember all the glorious cars that would still be around if not for cancer covered by rubber

    • @morphius747
      @morphius747 4 года назад +2

      whats a good coating?

    • @morphius747
      @morphius747 4 года назад +1

      @@TheGhjgjgjgjgjg whats a good coating?

    • @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg
      @TheGhjgjgjgjgjg 4 года назад +5

      @@morphius747 Fluid film or Krown.Anything that maintains an oily consistency is what you want

    • @Mixz1890
      @Mixz1890 4 года назад +3

      @@TheGhjgjgjgjgjg krown is utter garbage....basically everywhere you spray it, it becomes really dirty and sticky. working on your car becomes hell. Waxes are much better

  • @RajeshSharma-jj4df
    @RajeshSharma-jj4df 2 года назад

    I am about to buy a new Honda CRV and the dealer kept on pushing towards a undercoating of rust protection without elaborating on what material he wound use.. After some research I found that it would be rubberized undercoating. Watching this video opened my eyes.

  • @mikecurry6847
    @mikecurry6847 3 года назад +4

    Wow, I'm really glad I watched this video because I'm not very knowledgeable on this and this is a little counterintuitive to me. I never would have guessed that undercoat could actually _cause_ this. But now that I've seen it explained it honestly makes perfect sense. I guess the decision is made for me then. Soft undercoat it is lol. My truck is 15 years old. It's real clean but I'm sure it's not clean enough to apply a hard undercoat. I know for a fact that it'll scale up in places because it's not possible to get it totally clean.

  • @dylanclay2741
    @dylanclay2741 4 года назад +2

    I've always used rustoleum black spray paint to undercoat my trucks instead of their undercoating, works good for me

  • @MrBeard-ig5zc
    @MrBeard-ig5zc 4 года назад +7

    I have fluid film on my 06 Chevy. Practically ZERO rust.

  • @21972069450471
    @21972069450471 26 дней назад

    I hope this commet reaches the right people. Im an Automation Technician for Medtronic making pacemakers and work in a clean room/dry room. These rooms are humidity controlled and are kept at .015% realitive humidity to ensure theres no moisture. That being said, if even the smallest amount of moisture makes contact with the battery it will short it.
    Anyone who is under coating their truck or car is being played like a fool. 99% of these shops are gonna drive your car onto a lift, in an OPEN SHOP (where theres tons of moisture and humidity), spray it and then roll it into their Parking Lot, exposed to the elements, waiting to dry. What they're suppose to do is place your car on a lift inside a DRY room and then do it. Then let it dry inside the dry room. Otherwise it's just going to trap moisture and your frame will rot.

  • @HillbillyRednecking
    @HillbillyRednecking 4 года назад +5

    Cosmoline Black is the best thing I’ve found for undercoating.

  • @brandonruhl4525
    @brandonruhl4525 4 года назад +2

    i use por15 on all my vehicles and i absolutely love it.

  • @SledgeHammer43
    @SledgeHammer43 4 года назад +2

    This just shows me improper installation. I use to work in a shop the only man allowed to do this was him and myself. We had to inspect, then rust remediation, aka wire or sand blast removal then Prime with etching primer then cure fully. Paint cure fully then rust proof coatings. When the new box frames came out we would not coat them because of the area we could not visually inspect.

  • @Exolesco
    @Exolesco 3 года назад

    My Dad bought a Toyota Highlander back in 2012 and the dealer convinced him to apply a rubberized undercoating. He traded it in for an Ram 1500 a couple of years later. Damn, am I glad that he traded it in.

  • @chrish5992
    @chrish5992 4 года назад +6

    I'd imagine part of the problem would be that the shop washes the underside (or are supposed to at least) then don't allow ample time for everything to dry before applying the undercoating

    • @kenj.8897
      @kenj.8897 3 года назад

      No , it's just a bad process and product from start to finish .

  • @chuyp3639
    @chuyp3639 4 года назад

    Man when I bought my truck the guy from the dealer say was a very good idea...
    I’m so stupid why I never looked for information before....and I was close to do the same stupid thing again
    Thank you very much for the info...

  • @kellerb1717
    @kellerb1717 4 года назад +7

    I used this kind of stuff all the time in the 90"s when I was selling a car. I thought it was great made under the car look new for the sale. I had no idea this was going to be the end result. I would like to say sorry to all those who bought a car from me back in the day.

    • @plmn93
      @plmn93 4 года назад

      "Yeah, but I'm sayin', that TruCoat, you don't get it and you get oxidization problems."

  • @scottnidell6259
    @scottnidell6259 3 года назад +1

    So under coating bad. What do you do to prevent rusting?

  • @alexpuls8219
    @alexpuls8219 4 года назад +9

    I find you don't need to undercoat Ford frames. You just have to wash them with water and they last forever. The coating they put on from the factory normally holds up really well. The rockers and cab corners are the problem area...

    • @neth77
      @neth77 3 года назад

      Don't forget to put your hose inside the holes in the chassis and watch the mud water flow out till clear.

  • @beesouljah
    @beesouljah 4 года назад

    I just watched a youtube video on DIY using rubberized rust preventative undercoating by some kid. Good thing I came to your video right after watching his. Thank you for the vid!

  • @somethingsomeone5440
    @somethingsomeone5440 4 года назад +31

    That’s sad. I bet the owner is pissed

  • @AdamB12
    @AdamB12 Год назад

    Living in the salt belt myself, its usually 10-12 years the rust will be so bad it wouldnt pass most state safety inspections. Oil/lanolin coatings are a blessing in the north.

  • @SavageBunny1
    @SavageBunny1 4 года назад +84

    Plot twist, he actually parks it in the ocean every night 🤣

    • @carlitosbrillante3329
      @carlitosbrillante3329 3 года назад +1

      This is lies I have painted my vehicles with this stuff and never had rust just comes off after a couple of years

    • @carlitosbrillante3329
      @carlitosbrillante3329 3 года назад

      @@cartermc107 texas dry humid weather no rain or snow nothing just hot and humid

    • @nathanielrichardson294
      @nathanielrichardson294 3 года назад

      @@carlitosbrillante3329 he might live up north. It does crack up here. Salt eats it away. But my brother and I bought the same truck same time in same shape. And the under coating added about 2-3 years of life.

  • @jimbrent8151
    @jimbrent8151 4 года назад

    Scotty Kilmer did a video stating about the same thing... He is from Buffalo NY (as am I) and I remember Ziebart and that my father refused to have that applied to his vehciles for the same reason. Scotty demonstrated that you just paint the underside with Rustoleom or regular car paint and it does a pretty good job of protecting the metal... I followed that suggestion and it appears to work.

  • @codilankford6173
    @codilankford6173 4 года назад +63

    Accelerated is an UNDERSTATEMENT, that rust was EXPEDITED!!

  • @jasonfalk7696
    @jasonfalk7696 3 года назад +1

    They actually sell frame caps for these trucks. It's a pretty common issue on 05 to 14 Ford frames.

  • @ftby59mikeD
    @ftby59mikeD 4 года назад +10

    I have to retract my comment on your other post, "THIS IS WHY DEALERS NO LONGER PUSH RUSTY JONES OR ZEIBART"...the consumers finally got on!

    • @MyHMMWVaddiction
      @MyHMMWVaddiction 4 года назад +1

      My Ford dealer sells a Fluid Film type of product. I just do it myself.

    • @CopCat34
      @CopCat34 4 года назад

      FTBY59 Mike D . My Grandfather had Zeibart sprayed on his brand new dream car. This was done per the recommendation of the Olds dealer. His 1973 Olds 88 convertible with a 455 engine rusted out completely. Dealerships are out to sell cars and ruin yours a soon as possible.

  • @icemule
    @icemule 4 года назад +1

    This guy knows his stuff, wish I lived near him because our 2004 Explorer with 213k will need a new 5r55w tranny soon and apparently you can't use a different tranny even the same 5r55 out of a Mustang, but I'd trust this guy to rebuild or fix it. It still works, but when does it go? Anytime between now and who knows. Odd because when I manual shift the auto trans, I don't get hard shifts, but alas I don't live nearby, it's a shame because we love this car, engine runs great, starts right up and frankly we are not rich, not worth taking a chance with an inferior mechanic, with, him I feel I'm not taking a chance, he would fix it right. Get video's, if you haven't subscribed you should.
    P.S My dad always said undercoating was a scam, but that was back in the day, didn't now they even ran this scam anymore, thought everyone was hip to it.

  • @stephencosta8671
    @stephencosta8671 4 года назад +5

    I think there should be an asterisks on the title: "Never use rubberized undercoating IF you don't know what you are doing or are going to do it wrong" hahaha
    For it to work as intended, yearly you need to remove anything that looks like it could be a problem spot and remove the surrounding rubber coat area down to the metal, clean with degreaser/alcohol, hit with rust converter after drying THEN apply the rubberized coat. This procedure works very well.
    As you mentioned, the luminaries this guy brought his car to were just applying the coat over the old one and saying hell to any of the finer details hahahah.
    That said, Fluid film/Wax film or NH oil is a much easier way to go and does a solid job keeping the metal environment anaerobic and stopping/slowing already present rust.

    • @matthewwilliams9200
      @matthewwilliams9200 4 года назад +1

      He bought it new and they continued to spray every year rubber is a bad idea it conceals and causes bad spots theoretically if there's no corrosion it might help by adding a barrier. BUT doing it hides to much adding risk of when it starts to dry rot hiding spots all the car.

    • @keshmo12
      @keshmo12 4 года назад

      I always figured the frame flexes and causes cracks in the rubber coating. Most frames flex a lot going bumpy stuff.

  • @marks9127
    @marks9127 2 месяца назад +1

    A lot depends on how you apply the undercoating! If you dont clean out the existing rust on the metal then no coating will ever work and peeling like this will happen. First you need to clean surface of all dirt and grime, then brush off the existing rust so that bare metal is visible, then apply undercoating, or even better first an epoxy primer and then an undercoating. Add wax on top of it so it wont crack in time. If everythings done and applied correctly, it will stick very well and last a long time. I've treated my car 5 years ago that way and the layer still holds strong.
    If applied directly to rust anythings pretty much a waste of money

  • @CarswithNash
    @CarswithNash 4 года назад +5

    I had a car that was Ziebarted and same thing, everything the Ziebart touched rusted out very fast, terrible stuff!

  • @michaelcollins3975
    @michaelcollins3975 22 дня назад

    The last time i seen a frame that bad. It was on an f150 that had been flooded during a hurricane in galveston tx . It was sold as a rust free texas truck. Within 2 years it was rusted almost as bad as that . Took the dash off to do heater core and the rust line went halfway up the windshield columns

  • @benjimenfranklin7650
    @benjimenfranklin7650 4 года назад +46

    You would be better off with no coating at all.

    • @scruffy6151
      @scruffy6151 4 года назад +1

      That is what i was thinking.

    • @tracycolorado
      @tracycolorado 4 года назад

      if you spray vinegar or baking soda and water , Every Year , on the Salt Deposits and rust residue , including inside frame rails

    • @benjimenfranklin7650
      @benjimenfranklin7650 4 года назад +2

      @@tracycolorado
      If they keep putting that coating on it's still going to hold water and salt . Your better off with no coating. I had a 1967 Plymouth fury that was in Texas before I got it . It had rust around the doors but the frame was good just a little surface rust. Nothing like that poor truck.

    • @zoidberg444
      @zoidberg444 4 года назад

      Yeah. If they put the same amount of salt on the roads in Chicagoland as they do here in England i'd say 15-16 years out of a Ford is fairly average.

    • @MrSilence99
      @MrSilence99 4 года назад +2

      @@zoidberg444 That rust is definitely excessive. But I bought a dodge Durango brand new and it got massive rust holes in it within 6 years of age. Even the license plate and lights fell off. We had to screw every back on the several times until we gave up and junked it. No more Chrysler products for me.

  • @q8satan
    @q8satan 4 года назад

    Thank you 🙏 very much for making this video!! You took a risk lifting this F150 but this is why we love you’re channel!

  • @workingshlub8861
    @workingshlub8861 4 года назад +5

    that ziebart stuff should be outlawed....company i worked for about 7 years ago bought 3 new f250 and ziebart all of them..i warned my boss not a good idea but he did not listen...ran into one of the guy i use to work with at home depot few months ago and sure enough all the 3 trucks frames were junk and rusted from inside out...dealer would not even take them in on trade ...

  • @NasVenture
    @NasVenture 3 года назад

    what should we apply to prevent corrosion?

  • @murphslife6481
    @murphslife6481 4 года назад +9

    I feel for the guy, so sorry to hear.

  • @brutallyhonestmf5578
    @brutallyhonestmf5578 4 года назад +2

    I sprayed my brand new 2020 car with Cosmoline. I live in North Ohio and work in Michigan, I let you know in April how it work.

  • @thesparkster
    @thesparkster 4 года назад +3

    It depends on if you use a real rubberized undercoating that remains flexible years later, and you should always prep the surface with a rust dissolver and then coat the surface with an anti-graffiti paint before applying the correct undercoating. And you never close up the drain holes. But that's also a modern Ford and they rust just like Dodge Durangos.

  • @348loadedlever3
    @348loadedlever3 4 года назад +1

    Pug 1 needs to see this, I used to restore cars and I hated to see cars that Zebart undercoated

    • @noblsht
      @noblsht 4 года назад

      Pug 1 what a hack not only does he spray cars with the stuff he doesn't do any scraping whatsoever just keep spraying like no tomorrow and charges people what a joke

  • @thomasbarlow4223
    @thomasbarlow4223 4 года назад +3

    I feel like a bi-monthly application of oil getting sprayed on with a pump sprayer would be best no?

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray 4 года назад

      I guess it depends on the oil but motor oils rot rubber from what I've seen plus what a mess to work on.

  • @sapphire163
    @sapphire163 4 года назад +2

    I worked for a new car dealership way back in 1984-1985. They would get customers to pay an extra 200-500 for a 'protection package'. You see what the undercoating does in this video. The paint protection was just wax from WalMart. Interior protection was regular Scotchguard. I was making $3.35 an hour. So it cost the dealership about $25 in parts and labor.

  • @TheXilya
    @TheXilya 4 года назад +21

    Looks like it’s been applied on dirty and rusty elements already

    • @WayneTesta4444
      @WayneTesta4444 4 года назад +5

      I went and had an estimate done for this and talked with them they prep and prime the surfaces before applying so this video looks like it was applied to a vehicle already with tons of rust.

    • @myrongaines5542
      @myrongaines5542 3 года назад +1

      It traps moisture and rots from the inside out

    • @RamRaj-if3ds
      @RamRaj-if3ds 3 года назад

      The application was wrong,,not the paint.

  • @dewrus2153
    @dewrus2153 4 года назад +2

    I think the best method is to get it done when brand new and then no more undercoating after that. This issue is caused by putting more on over exiting rust. Same is in South Main's video...it was undercoated after it was years-old and already rusty. It's a recipe for bad rust. Also, when done every year, it will crack and those cracks trap moisture and cause new rust. Do it once when new and then only use something like Fluidfilm etc after that...especially in the wheel wells, in rocker panels, and doors. My 2004 F-150 was Zirbarted days after I bought it and then I've just been using FluidFilm from a can the last few years. NO rust issues...and I live in the rust belt.

    • @TaurenJam
      @TaurenJam 2 года назад +1

      Do you just spray the fluid film over the rubber undercoating ? The dealer of course set me up with this and now I'm regretting big time where I might just trade my vehicle in

    • @Twolves2005
      @Twolves2005 2 года назад +1

      I think you might be right. I just took delivery of an f150 and want to get valugard coating done at linex - 1 and done application (lifetime warranty no reapplications). However, I'm concerned about the reputation of the coatings, should I decide to sell at some point, due to the affects of people who use it to cover up rust or have it applied to used vehicles.

    • @dewrus2153
      @dewrus2153 2 года назад +1

      @@Twolves2005 - I think if you get it done the way you mentioned, you’ll be fine. You’ll have a record showing it was done when it was new and will also have a lifetime warranty to pass to any future owners.

  • @TheTarrMan
    @TheTarrMan 4 года назад +3

    Aren't they supposed to scrap all that off before reapplying?

    • @madmax2069
      @madmax2069 4 года назад

      Yes, but it wouldn't matter. It would still cause it to rust out quicker than normal. Fluid film or something similar is what you want.

  • @uujwiuxux7521
    @uujwiuxux7521 2 года назад

    Great video really opened my eyes I'm in the middle of a 01 dodge 2500 restoration and i wont be doing this to it.

  • @detroitgarage9430
    @detroitgarage9430 4 года назад +6

    That's nasty, I spray my truck every August with New Hampshire Undercoating thats oil. Great product.:)

  • @bubba99009
    @bubba99009 4 года назад +2

    Seems like a welder could repair that framerail by reinforcing it with some new steel. It's bad - but a 2005 would be really bad even with no coating trapping the water - depending on where it was driven. The most amazing thing is the cab corners and rocker panels aren't rusted out. You see those rusting out on F-150s 10 years newer.

  • @aidenmonkeynat6024
    @aidenmonkeynat6024 4 года назад +10

    Remember RUSTY JONES from back in the 80s

    • @volvo09
      @volvo09 4 года назад

      When I was a little kid I kept seeing that sticker on my family and family friends cars (which were always rusty) and I thought it was a sticker rusty cars got! haha.

  • @bkranz-1283
    @bkranz-1283 4 года назад +1

    Live on a gravel road in Minnesota. Own a 2010 f-150 supercrew with 217,000 miles. Never undercoated the truck and frame is in very good shape. Minor surface rust you would completely expect to find by now. What I can’t stand is how my cab corners on the body of the truck rusted all the way through within 3 1/2 years of purchase. Never tampered with them in any way even though I wish I would have. I suppose if I could have a do-over I would drill a hole in the very bottom of the cab corners so crap could drain cuz ford obviously designed it so crap could work it’s way in there and rot it out from the inside. I see rust on every dang f-150 cab corner it seems but for some reason my particular truck had it REALLY BAD. I can fit both my hands up either cab corner at this point and the rust extends beyond the trim line on the body of the truck where ford puts their 2-tone. I can’t be that mad cuz my truck is plenty old by now but just remember how earlier I said it only took 3 1/2 years for me to be able to stick a finger through my cab! I was furious back then.

  • @TheKingOfHalo
    @TheKingOfHalo 4 года назад +4

    The rocker panels on my 2000 explorer are still brand new. Then again, I live in Florida lol.

  • @canadianehbignorth7325
    @canadianehbignorth7325 4 года назад

    My JGC is going to be turning 12 soon and the thing doesn't have a spec of rust on it despite the fact that my roads are covered in salt 6months out of the year. It's not hard to keep the underside pristine if you never let it go bad in the first place; the average person can do it.
    Crawl under it once a year, wash it with a degreaser (water&dishsoap), scrape away any rust (shouldn't require more then a steel bristle pad if you've been doing this since day one), spray any exposed metal with some rust-reform paint you get in a can, and then spray a wax/oil coating, again that comes in a can.
    It costs about as much as an oil change and takes an hour or two once a year.

  • @dc8237
    @dc8237 4 года назад +7

    The majority of these f150 have frame issues I’d say 1 in 4 we see have bad frames 2004-2009

  • @amandagirl8042
    @amandagirl8042 2 года назад +1

    while you are right about the under coating an oil is the only way to go not that dripless garbage or cavity wax but boxed frames are the biggest issue my favorite proven product the rust check oil but it will swell up rubbers. i am a 35 yr auto body tech in canada

  • @kevinbarry71
    @kevinbarry71 4 года назад +42

    One of the original dealership scams

    • @ronaldhickman9953
      @ronaldhickman9953 4 года назад

      Kevin Barry ....I remember 20 25 30 years ago when they were warning about the side work system saying that it did just this it was considered a gimmick then.....

    • @ronaldhickman9953
      @ronaldhickman9953 4 года назад

      Ziebart system....

    • @benson4u215
      @benson4u215 4 года назад +2

      Lol my mom bought an experimental 09 malibu in 2008 before they were an official model out for public buying and had the dealership do the works on it, when they did the undercoating they sprayed Everything so badly the abs system would not stop locking up so we only had the car less than a few months before the dealer fucked over the first 09 model here. Chevy asked her what she thought of the vehicle shortly after and she told them it was a death trap so they released the 2009 model to the public anyways only 2 weeks after that

  • @Sc0teeBe318
    @Sc0teeBe318 2 года назад

    I sprayed rust fix on first, then a couple layers of black paint/primer. There was only a little surface rust to begin with and most of the factory undercoating was still intact. After doing all of that I finally sprayed the rubberized coating on.

  • @pindiwal4717
    @pindiwal4717 4 года назад +12

    Go to carwash, soap undercarriage with pressure washer and wash with pressure washer at least once a week in winter and you won't need anything else.

    • @zoidberg444
      @zoidberg444 4 года назад +3

      @Joe Black That is why cars in Alaska or the NWT or up in Northern Scandinavia (above the arctic circle) are pretty clean. To cold to rust and in some cases they go easy on the road salt up there because of sparse populations and because its to cold for it to be effective.

    • @AKJeeper
      @AKJeeper 4 года назад +2

      @@zoidberg444 Cars don't really rust in Interior Alaska - or at least they didn't until the roads started getting way more caustic deicer sprayed on them (they only sanded until the last decade or so).. South central and all of coastal Alaska is a horrible environment for vehicles due to the humidity, salt air, as well as the road deicer used here. Then add the dirt from the gravel roads into the mix to trap this chemical concoction underneath your vehicle.

    • @grumpy1311
      @grumpy1311 4 года назад +1

      Not recommended to use soap products underneath a vehicle. It washes away the important oils and grease from components, leaving them fresh exposed for new salt incursion.
      Water only is a better option

    • @alexpuls8219
      @alexpuls8219 4 года назад +1

      @Joe Black but in places like where Brian lives where they get lots of snow but the temperature is always fluctuating above and below freezing the salt from the roads really eats away at the vehicle that much faster. So you really have to keep your vehicle clean or it will rust quickly.

  • @lawnboyfreak
    @lawnboyfreak 4 года назад +1

    I’ve always used Rust Check. It’s worked fantastic for me, and I didn’t spray it every year.

  • @willietheboggle3954
    @willietheboggle3954 4 года назад +6

    Bees wax boiled linseed oil heat and an old paint sprayer .

  • @midwestfarm757
    @midwestfarm757 4 года назад

    Looks clean compared to our 2007 Taurus. Rusted all the way through. The floor boards are just the carpeting. Brake lines rusted through, and all rockers are completely gone. Not sure if it was rust proofed when new, but you see it on a lot of Taurus.

  • @fabio40
    @fabio40 4 года назад +24

    Something tells me it's "really bad".

    • @JJ-iu5hl
      @JJ-iu5hl 3 года назад

      And not just "really bad," but "really, really bad"

  • @MARedleg
    @MARedleg 4 года назад

    I’m so happy I live in Deep South Texas where the climate is dry and we don’t use salt on our roads. My 2016 Colorado is still pristine underneath and should last me a long time.

  • @sew04ss
    @sew04ss 4 года назад +5

    Put full coverage on it incase you have an accident in the snow or rain 😉

  • @mariod9290
    @mariod9290 2 года назад +1

    ooh shit .... I did this to my truck , I sprayed under coat with Rust-Oleum Automotive Matte Black Rubberized Undercoating Spray ... Live & Learn

  • @luisaguilar3959
    @luisaguilar3959 4 года назад +10

    It’s also a nightmare to work on vehicles with that type of coding.

  • @chriswicklund863
    @chriswicklund863 2 года назад

    Im a big fan of just washing and i mean a real good detail top to bottem after any snow storm.