Well I gave a good try to some Landover styled rust converter and protector.
It did convert surface rust and is in an acrylic water based medium.
However, all treated parts turned chocolate brown after a few days, and it was a pain removing the acrylic film back down to rusty metal again. That's going in the bin at a total loss of nearly fourth quid which hurts. But there is no way it will find its way onto my chassis, just not happening .
So after doing research for something to protect, with powerful anti corrosive properties to match galvanized metal, and most importantly bing extremely well with bog-body filler. I came to the Raptor.
I needed to protect the bare metal immediately and before filling. Normally I use system 20 2k high build primer, and it has never let me down.
But this bulkhead really seems to want to rust, so something better was needed.
All the welding and grinding is done. Lots of filling and flatting is needed to work towards a quality finish. I caused some distortions butt welding, but it's all really strong and solid. But I should have not permitted as much hear build up in some parts, my bad.
Meet 5liyres of Raptor Epoxy anti corrosive Primer.
You can spray this stuff on a panel with surface rust, let it set, or is that evolve lol.
Then spray salty water at the panel for 2000hours, and nothing happens to it.
That's what I call Military grade protection
Also because it's an epoxy based primer, it will bond awesomely well with filler, which is perfect.
This stuff is my first choice to protect my Chassis with a black 2K pain over it.
It does seem expensive at £130 for 5 Litres, but that will do all my steel bits and go a very long way. It also keeps well.
I know some parts look awful where I've cut sections of rusty metal out and welded new metal in, but these will improve dramatically with some panel beating and flatting out.
The important thing is no more bare metal to oxidize Infront of me, and as I work more Raptor will be applied.
When it's good the voids will be treated with Waxol several times by insertion of a special long tube applicator. Well it's just some nylon tube with a nail in the end. The nail let's the warm wax past and causes it to spray out sideways, so it's perfect for impossible to reach internal spaces. I have found the key to using Waxol is a big bucket of very hot water, to get the oil very warm and melted to liquid form.