moparvinson
Well-Known Member
Working on a 73 road runner with top areas that has surface rust. What is best way to remove it? I bought the drum type sander from harbour freight but haven't tried it yet. Thanks
Evapo rust will not help you on that. Im doing a 70 charger now,will not be a show car. I would pull hood and sand down on top and uses a stripper on bottom side of hood. You could prime and paint. I stripped my car down and going to epoxy prime and then paint.
I agree but its really is made for putting something in it ,soaking. I would think that would be time consuming. JMOI disagree.... I've used evaporust on similar rust.... I used a couple terry towels, laid them over the rust then poured Evaporust on the towels... Re-wetting them every couple hours.... It did a great job...
Looks like a great way to make the car wavy as fawk...
It was time consuming, I had the towels on the hood for three days before I was sure it had done all it was gonna do...I agree but its really is made for putting something in it ,soaking. I would think that would be time consuming. JMO
Like I already posted, rust will still be living in the tiny pits... Take your pick, Evaporust/rust convertor/metal prep... Don't just paint over it & trust it to stay gone.. I've seen guys try that before...Im going this route and stripper View attachment 1727022
That's why I haven't tried it yet but all reviews swear by it? Might try it on some scrap parts 1stLooks like a great way to make the car wavy as fawk...
Agree, I had planned on sanding to just knock off the majority of the rust before treating the restLike I already posted, rust will still be living in the tiny pits... Take your pick, Evaporust/rust convertor/metal prep... Don't just paint over it & trust it to stay gone.. I've seen guys try that before...
So, a cup brush, dust mask, and a lot of nasty dust, then a little evaporust...... Or, a few terry towels, some Evaporust & a little time...Last time I did something like that I started with a big wire cup on my 7.5" giant angle grinder. You will want some type of dust mask it will make a cloud. It will also remove a lot of that without heat. Note: NOT the twisted cable style. Just regular wire cup. One $20 cup can do a lot of work for you. As in more then one project. On a side note I also find them useful to determine the extent of damage on stuff like floors or trunks, because it will shine it up enough to see just how bad the pitting is, how solid the metal actually is.
Once all the bulk/loose/scaly stuff is gone, I used a combo of an regular orbital sander with a sandpaper disc stuck on it and a smaller air tool with the 3M discs as mentioned above.
If you think you have pitting, which you will with that level of rust, converter is fine or if you are really worried about it evapo-rust, clean it off well, then do your converter/primer.
Have fun! Cleaning something up like that is very satisfying I think.