POR15 and Other Rust Convertors
#1
Posted 05 July 2006 - 06:06 PM
This question comes about because of two things ive gotto do.
Firstly I've bought a trailer, and ive gotto stop the rust thats happening. From what i can see even though the rust has turned pretty heavy in some areas, (leaving large flakes of metal), its mainly surface rust.
I've got it in my head that i can "scrape" off the loose stuff and maybe sand some of the surface rust and then use a "Rust converter" to stop further rust, and then do any repairs that are needed.
Also I have the SL/R which has some pretty serious rust in the back end and by the sounds of it in the doors.
I was wondering if i'm on the right track with the trailer, and would the same method be acceptable to use on the torana to STOP the rust from going further before i get the time to actually repair the torry propperly?
Has anyone used a commercially available rust convertor ( I used a "kitten" brand small bottle on some surface stuff in the monaro and it did a great job), and If so what brand they would reccomend. Also if there are any tips or tricks that i should follow when trying to use this gear!
Any help appreciated!
Cheers
Tiny.
#2
Posted 05 July 2006 - 06:21 PM
For the trailer...get a sledge hammer and give it a big hit and the big flakes of rust will fall off....just get all the debris off and paint it on.
It will work in the SLR..but it won't look pretty.
#3
Posted 05 July 2006 - 06:26 PM
#4
Posted 05 July 2006 - 06:32 PM
LXM21: POR15... I remeber reading/hearing about this! I'll search for it and have a read, but was it a rust convertor or a rust preventative??
THanks for the feedback! Any mroe info would be great!!
#5
Posted 05 July 2006 - 07:09 PM
#6
Posted 05 July 2006 - 07:13 PM
#7
Posted 05 July 2006 - 10:39 PM
rust converters work, some better than others, but preperation plays a part here too.
again try to remove as much as possible first. try industry suppliers for products.
my opinion is that if the treament you are using is leving a film it must be sealing rust in aswell. i think the products that react with the substrate and require removal must be truly converting and not just conditioning ready for paint.
#8
Posted 05 July 2006 - 10:54 PM
#9 _RpM_
Posted 05 July 2006 - 11:17 PM
I will stand by the POR15 testemonials... I used it on my LJ floor, and I used it on my old man's E-Type when we were restoring that.
I used 1/3rd of the 1liter tin on the entire floor (4 door LJ) and a bout the same again on the boot floor and the petrol tank.
The floor wasnt rusty, but the POR15 is a preventative, as well as a convertor.
On the E-Type, There was a small amount of rust, painted one coat on, let it dry, painted another coat, let it dry, belted it with a hammer, not so much as a scratch, let alone chipping or cracking.
The picture below is after I coated the floor of the torry (Bit messy coz i walked on it with my work boots).
The excellent thing about the POR15 is that it finds its own level, so you dont have thicker bits and thinner bits across the surface.
FANTASTIC stuff, and would recomend it to anyone!! Very much worth the money!
#10 _munro_
Posted 05 July 2006 - 11:47 PM
kmart sell one called rustbuster
when you get it ignore the instructions this is how i use it
it's like water in property but if you soak whatever your trying to clean up ova night you can go out in the morning and wire buff most of the rust away
repeat this till you've got clean metal
once clean and cleaned(residue washed away) etch prime then prime
even better is to sand blast but it's alot of cleaning up.
i've also been told that a rust removal gel has come on the market.
i havn't used it but if it's half as good as i've been told it should work well.
cheers tom
Edited by munro, 05 July 2006 - 11:47 PM.
#11
Posted 07 July 2006 - 05:13 PM
The trailer is something that doesnt really matter... We shouldnt be hanging on to it for a longperiod of time. But I'd like to get the torana right!
As FastEH said I'd like to use the rust convertor as a stopgap cause the whole idea of the torana was to teach myself to pannel beat a bit! Thing is.. its turning out to be SUCH a long term project that there wont be anything left to beat! Only to sweep away! LOL!
Anyhow, Thanks for the tips, I'm going to have a good look into the POR15 as ive heard really good stuff about it, but i'll keep asking around for the other stuff too!
Cheers!
#12
Posted 07 July 2006 - 05:32 PM
http://www.ppc.au.com/corroison.htm
Made by the people who make ( or import) POR15... Sounds pretty trick to me!!
#13 _RpM_
Posted 07 July 2006 - 06:00 PM
#14
Posted 07 July 2006 - 06:15 PM
The way i read it the POR15 is a rust preventative... its wont neutralise rust thats already there ( but it will stop further moisture.air getting to it!)
I think you use the Deox, and then paint with POR for best results!
#15 _RpM_
Posted 08 July 2006 - 01:29 AM
#16 _73LJWhiteSL_
Posted 08 July 2006 - 01:23 PM
(Bottle on the Left if you hadn't guessed)
Steve
#17 _munro_
Posted 08 July 2006 - 04:03 PM
Tiny if you coat all afected parts in this it will stop rust spreading
if you continually work it the rust will compleatly disolve away
this stuffs cheap and efective
tom
#18
Posted 08 July 2006 - 07:18 PM
Thanks guys great work!!
#19 _RpM_
Posted 29 July 2006 - 03:26 PM
No idea how it works (Read; didnt really read or go into it at all) but just thought it might be worth checking out if someone was into it enough.
#20
Posted 29 July 2006 - 09:36 PM
Sounds good in the brouchure though
I sell POR15 and I think its the stuff I will be using on the hatch
$220 for 4 litres I think is a fair price
And more than enough to do my projects....... well some of them anyway
#21 _RpM_
Posted 01 August 2006 - 01:40 PM
I agree 100% ... Por15 is fantastic$220 for 4 litres I think is a fair price
And more than enough to do my projects....... well some of them anyway
#22 _jugs_
Posted 01 November 2006 - 11:01 PM
just thought i'd add my 2cents worth
Jugs
#23
Posted 27 November 2006 - 03:35 PM
#24
Posted 22 May 2007 - 11:39 PM
Is the trailer still working well.being smashed and bashed.
cheers
#25
Posted 21 October 2007 - 10:59 PM
The rust converters have a chemical reaction with the rust itself and is an important/critical part of the process.
The stuff I have used is a commercial product, and it states to do it this way.
The bottle is at work; I�ll check the name and post later.
I lightly dry scrubbed where I could reach then vacuumed to remove the loose stuff, then plastered this stuff into every reachable cavity in the hatch, so far so good.
Paul
Edited by LX2DR, 21 October 2007 - 11:01 PM.
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