You would amazed at how well this combo works. When I pulled the Left Rear Wheel, what I found was crazy with surface rust, but no penetrating rust. Even the rear drums, which were new when the vehicle was parked in 1998 looked awful. Shocks? Rusted. Swing arm? Rusted. Everything: Rusted.
But just the surface. I spend a good hour whanging a small hammer around underneath...listening. Never once did it go 'crunch!' when I tapped metal. Much of the factory undercoating is still in place, which is a blessing. So I have good reason to have high confidence in the structural soundness of the frame.
That doesn't mean that I'm going to drive it in this condition; since the whole brake system has to be checked out, most likely all of these parts are either going to be replaced or are going to get a coating of Eastwood Rust Encapsulator (which is just the UK Corroless, rebranded.) But items like that rear wheel drum (knowing when the drum went on and how few miles were put on it) may be completely salvageable with light machining on the inside.
But back to engine and transmission. Looking like they had been sprayed with tar and then feathered with powdered charcoal, they were in bad shape, and made it difficult to avoid coming out from under the car without looking like Al Jolsen in 'The Jazz Singer.'
After much cleaning, the individual fins on the bottom of the case were visible again. The ribs on the transmission took more work but eventually washed clean as well. (Reference photo) |
I wandered back out and lit up the pressure washer with a long tap from our deep sink, which is, by way of copper pipe, only a meter from the hot water heater. I dialed the nozzle to zero interference, lay down on my creeper, and started blasting. This water was near 130*F and between the solvent, the heat and the pressure, the goop on the engine and transmission came off, though the transmission required a recoating of solvent.
After that, I switched over to an industrial cleaner that fed into the pressure washer stream by venturi and cleaned sections of the body, especially those behind the rear wheels. I think old Ferd' is going to be 5 pounds lighter in the rear end, now that all of that dirt is out. And another surprise was waiting for me: what I had assumed was rust in the rear wheel wells was really orange dirt! Under it, I found that the original undercoating was mostly intact, with just a spritz of red from the slovenly job that MAACO had done when they had pimped up Ferd' with his coat of red paint over the CE1 Agate Brown / Atlas White factory combination.
This cleaning job is more than just fastidiousness on my part. It is an essential part of inspection, and knowing the condition of the vehicle. While it would be lovely to be able to do this kind of deep inspection prior to purchase, unless you're buying from a close friend, it is unlikely that a buyer is going to let you work over a vehicle in this much detail.
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