I too question the overall effectiveness of Fertan. I recently acquired an old steel narrowboat and have stripped back with a Tercoo blaster and then Fertaned any remaining rust patches. After leaving to work for the advised time period then scrubbing off with water I find that many patches bloom up brahman orange with rust within a day or so (no rain). Somewhat disappointing. I think the best thing to do is strip back with poly strip abrasive discs and epoxy immediately. Although this is far from practical when painting a whole boat cabin
Hi, just seen your video, yes, interesting. I have been saying for a few years now that Fertan is the best rust converter out there, and I still believe that to be the case, but there is a specific way to use it. In reality, you never put any faith in overcoating heavily rusted steel, you always try to remove as much rust as you can by whatever means you can before coating it with anything. All rust converters have the same limitation, they only convert a few molecules deep and do not penetrate. Coating rusted steel with anything that excludes air and seals out moisture, which would literally be any non-water based paint, would have probably passed your test, the down side being that the rust will come back through the paint if left long enough due to the small amount of moisture and air trapped beneath the coat of paint. Look at examples like steel bridges and oil rigs, if there was a product that you could apply once and the rust was sorted for good, it would be worth billions! Although Fertan state that once applied the work piece can be safely left for months only applies to normal ambient conditions. Were you to wet it with anything containing water, it will fail. However, apply Fertan to steel with as much rust removed as possible, dry it thoroughly and overcoat with 2 good coats of epoxy primer, in my experience, it is the best you can do.
Thanks for your comment and taking the time to write a long and contructive one I'm always up for a good discussion. The reasion I conducted my test like this, is that I tried to push the products to their limits. I already made a second Video were I changed to a pure salt solution and retested the Fertan with some acrylic paints and I got really wierd behavior from it, which makes me question it's effectiveness. But it's still a widely used product so there must be something to it. I still need to get to the bottom if these issues I had.
@@klmindustries4812Thanks for taking time with the comment. I am currently using Fertan to stop de-rusted steel parts, mainly nuts and bolts, from flash rusting and it seems to work just fine. I am using a product from Bilt Hamber called De-OxC and it is fantastic. Works great and much cheaper than Evaporust, certainly here in the UK. Going back to the Fertan, they recommend just rinsing off the excess, but I find this leaves behind a layer which has not adhered to the metal and pulls off easily when overpainted. I tend to go over the treated surface with water and a grey scotch pad using light pressure. I then epoxy prime and paint and all seems to be good. It would be interesting to share your experiences with Fertan themselves and see what they have to say about it. I worked on cruise ships for 12 years, and when they re-finish a ship's hull in dry dock, they do not treat the rust with anything, it is just painted over, so relies on encapsulation of the existing rust. It's as though they know that doing anything else is just a waste of time and money, similarly with steel bridges.
@klmindustries4812 I don't think the product works regardless but the instructions say after applying fertan wait 24 hr then wash the surface with water and let it dry. Then you got to apply the epoxy primer.
Unfortunately the use case of these products in this video is wrong. Neither Brunox nor Fertan are meant to be used as a final/top layer. They are meant as a first layer you put on rust so that rust is transformed and the newly created layer can then be cleaned up and a base coat can be applied (and a finishing coat after that). So this test unfortunately proves nothing.
My Point was that the Rust protection must come from the first layer on the metal. If that can't provide adequate rust protection on it's own, you might as well use a standart primer and paint over that. And Brunox still managed to do a great job.
@@klmindustries4812 The problem is that the products were not meant to be used that way - especially Fertan. You cannot expect it to work when you use it outside of the actual use case. Fertan needs up to 48h to work properly, but you sprayed it with a solution and exposed it to the elements instantly. Of course that is not gonna work. Brunox, on the other hand, can also be used as a base coat because of the epoxy part, which is exactly what it did.
ahh dude. Why u are doing rusted suface test if u dont give it time. U need a long time to see the results for neitralisation. U just tested sealing capeabilieties... u could just aplied regular lacker and would come out great. Covered rust spots continue to degrade metal slowly but realy badly. That just wont hapen under a short time of period under the influence of salt water that has no chance to reach the metal.
Hallo Tom, Wie im Video erwähnt hab ich das Fertan 48h Einwirken lassen und dann abgewaschen "I treated everythig according to the Instructions." 4:50 Hab das abwaschen aus Flow Gründen nicht ins Video genommen.
I too question the overall effectiveness of Fertan. I recently acquired an old steel narrowboat and have stripped back with a Tercoo blaster and then Fertaned any remaining rust patches. After leaving to work for the advised time period then scrubbing off with water I find that many patches bloom up brahman orange with rust within a day or so (no rain). Somewhat disappointing. I think the best thing to do is strip back with poly strip abrasive discs and epoxy immediately. Although this is far from practical when painting a whole boat cabin
Hi, just seen your video, yes, interesting. I have been saying for a few years now that Fertan is the best rust converter out there, and I still believe that to be the case, but there is a specific way to use it. In reality, you never put any faith in overcoating heavily rusted steel, you always try to remove as much rust as you can by whatever means you can before coating it with anything. All rust converters have the same limitation, they only convert a few molecules deep and do not penetrate. Coating rusted steel with anything that excludes air and seals out moisture, which would literally be any non-water based paint, would have probably passed your test, the down side being that the rust will come back through the paint if left long enough due to the small amount of moisture and air trapped beneath the coat of paint. Look at examples like steel bridges and oil rigs, if there was a product that you could apply once and the rust was sorted for good, it would be worth billions! Although Fertan state that once applied the work piece can be safely left for months only applies to normal ambient conditions. Were you to wet it with anything containing water, it will fail. However, apply Fertan to steel with as much rust removed as possible, dry it thoroughly and overcoat with 2 good coats of epoxy primer, in my experience, it is the best you can do.
Thanks for your comment and taking the time to write a long and contructive one I'm always up for a good discussion.
The reasion I conducted my test like this, is that I tried to push the products to their limits. I already made a second Video were I changed to a pure salt solution and retested the Fertan with some acrylic paints and I got really wierd behavior from it, which makes me question it's effectiveness. But it's still a widely used product so there must be something to it. I still need to get to the bottom if these issues I had.
@@klmindustries4812Thanks for taking time with the comment. I am currently using Fertan to stop de-rusted steel parts, mainly nuts and bolts, from flash rusting and it seems to work just fine. I am using a product from Bilt Hamber called De-OxC and it is fantastic. Works great and much cheaper than Evaporust, certainly here in the UK. Going back to the Fertan, they recommend just rinsing off the excess, but I find this leaves behind a layer which has not adhered to the metal and pulls off easily when overpainted. I tend to go over the treated surface with water and a grey scotch pad using light pressure. I then epoxy prime and paint and all seems to be good. It would be interesting to share your experiences with Fertan themselves and see what they have to say about it. I worked on cruise ships for 12 years, and when they re-finish a ship's hull in dry dock, they do not treat the rust with anything, it is just painted over, so relies on encapsulation of the existing rust. It's as though they know that doing anything else is just a waste of time and money, similarly with steel bridges.
The question is, would epoxy primer( without Fertan) work equally well?
Did you use water on fertan sheet? Fertan is water base.
I used water to rinse it off, after 48 hours according to instructions.
@klmindustries4812 I don't think the product works regardless but the instructions say after applying fertan wait 24 hr then wash the surface with water and let it dry. Then you got to apply the epoxy primer.
Unfortunately the use case of these products in this video is wrong. Neither Brunox nor Fertan are meant to be used as a final/top layer. They are meant as a first layer you put on rust so that rust is transformed and the newly created layer can then be cleaned up and a base coat can be applied (and a finishing coat after that). So this test unfortunately proves nothing.
My Point was that the Rust protection must come from the first layer on the metal. If that can't provide adequate rust protection on it's own, you might as well use a standart primer and paint over that. And Brunox still managed to do a great job.
@@klmindustries4812 The problem is that the products were not meant to be used that way - especially Fertan. You cannot expect it to work when you use it outside of the actual use case. Fertan needs up to 48h to work properly, but you sprayed it with a solution and exposed it to the elements instantly. Of course that is not gonna work. Brunox, on the other hand, can also be used as a base coat because of the epoxy part, which is exactly what it did.
😻 *promo sm*
ahh dude. Why u are doing rusted suface test if u dont give it time. U need a long time to see the results for neitralisation. U just tested sealing capeabilieties... u could just aplied regular lacker and would come out great. Covered rust spots continue to degrade metal slowly but realy badly. That just wont hapen under a short time of period under the influence of salt water that has no chance to reach the metal.
Fertan muß 24 Std. besser 48 Stunden drauf, danach muß es mit Wasser abgewaschen werden. Diesen Schritt haben Sie nicht gemacht.
Hallo Tom,
Wie im Video erwähnt hab ich das Fertan 48h Einwirken lassen und dann abgewaschen "I treated everythig according to the Instructions." 4:50
Hab das abwaschen aus Flow Gründen nicht ins Video genommen.