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RE: POR's
David Willmon wrote:
> I'm starting to work on the body of my 800 now and I'm wondering
> if the POR
> is the best way to seal the underside against rust. Is it worth it? How
> much does it cost and how difficult is it to work with? Can you
> just brush
> it on?
Well, POR-15 is extremely hard - and it'll surely survive those rock chips.
But - its biggest advantage - of bonding to the steel, keeping moisture out,
stopping rust & moisture from traveling between paint & steel, etc - require
that it be painted directly on the steel.
You *can* paint it over existing paint. But, you loose all advantages
except its hardness.
I'd consider it quite cheap - compared to almost anything else. It costs
less than half the cost of a quality underseal, durabak, etc.
It can be painted or sprayed. But, since it has a lot of isocyanides (sp?),
I wouldn't spray it without much better respiratory equipment than I intend
to buy. So, I've brushed it on in the past, and will be brushing it again
in a couple of weeks.
Their website, www.por-15.com, has quite a bit of info; and their online
sales folks are terrific. They were able to give me info about temperature,
product compatability, etc, etc.
I'm going to be using POR-15 on the interior, and 3M underseal on the
bottom. The underseal product comes in a handy aerosol can, I've seen it
last over 10 years, tends to fill minor gaps, etc.
ken f.
- References:
- POR's
- From: "David Willmon" <dwillmo@domain.elided>
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