jamesmartin
Well-Known Member
if you ask motor factors for general purpose thinners its very cheap ,
mine has dried nicely and with a waxoyl coating on top mud doesnt tend to stick at all!,one question i do have is whats the best way of cleaning your chassis without removing the waxoyl after off roading??
thats because your not using cheap thinners ,thinners because it dries on contactWaxoyl best thinned with white spirit, and the can warmed as well in this weather!
Personally prefer Ankor Wax - drives water away on application whereas Waxoyl can trap it, and also easier to spray
thats because your not using cheap thinners ,thinners because it dries on contact
it certainly is ,waxoyling alreay rusty car is better than nothing but usually a bit lateif you want full on protection get it back to bare metal then use some industrial red oxide, Over coat it with industrial two pack paint ( got some stuff they use on offshore containers and other oil and gas kit then go over with clear ankor wax or similar. beat that winter salt
I gave mine a clean off , epoxied it and then gave it a coat of 3m stone chip - well 12 litres actually idea being the epoxy stops moisture getting tot he steel and the 3m shultz stops stones chipping the epoxy off. I then gave the sills and chassis internals about 5 litres of dinitrol and ML cavity wax.
all whilst it was baking hot this year so it was all very dry to start with.
I use hamerite "underbody seal with waxoyl" on the outside of the chassis and waxoyl on the inside and out. the underbody seal with waxoyl doesn't set like the underseal of old, it works for me and I've used it on loads of cars over the years, preparation is the key.
you know 5th wheel grease is just ****e oil so can have any number of bits in it to help corrode.
You starting to make me think of using the valve sealant we use at work but at £1000 for less than 12kgs i think it might be a tad expensive.