
RUST NO MORE
Winter
Driving Tips To Prevent Salt From Ruining Your Ride
Winter brings
a lot of beauty to the landscape. But it also brings with it a cause for
concern to owners of new vehicles: rust. Rust is the cancer of cars. Once
it starts, it’s difficult and expensive to stop. The good news is you can
prevent the onslaught of rust in your new car, truck or SUV by taking a
few preventative measures.
The number
one rust-inducers is salt, and salt is as prevalent in winter as snow.
That’s because clearing winter roads to the bare pavement usually requires
de-icing chemicals.
Those
de-icing methods typically involve the use of salt (sodium chloride),
which usually comes from mined rock salt that has been crushed, screened,
and treated with an anti-caking agent. The other de-icing agent is
calcium chloride, which comes from natural brines. Both are serious
rust makers.
When your
vehicle I exposed to either form of chloride, the chances of corrosion is
greatly accelerated. This is especially true when existing corrosion (like
that found in small dents and dings left exposed to the elements) gets
exposed to even relatively small amounts of chloride.
A good way to
keep salt exposure—and the formation of rust—at bay is to employ these
steps recommended by the leading experts in automotive rust prevention:
o
To prevent winter
damage, it is recommended that you wash your vehicle every 10 days. Wash
your vehicle whenever the temperature is 40 degrees F. and above. Do it
during the day so that it dries completely before freezing evening
temperatures begin.
o
spray door locks
liberally with WD-40 before parking it to prevent locks from freezing.
o
Always wash your car
right after a snow or rain shower. Rain and snow collect pollutants in the
air and drop them as acid rain which can damage the cars protective
finish. Snow and sleet also include the corrosive road salt.
o
Wash the underside
of your car often during the winter months in car washes that do not
use recycled water.
o
Avoid driving
through large puddles of standing water on salted roads because the
puddles are filled with saturated road salt.
o
Any paint chips that
are larger than the tip of a pen should be repaired immediately because
they are open for rust to begin
o
Use foot brushes and
floor mats that can be cleaned easily because the salt water will rot out
floorboards. A good scrubbing is necessary because soapy water alone will
not remove all of the chemicals.
o
"If you buy a
vehicle and plan to keep it for more than four years, consider taking it
to a reliable rust control business to be sprayed every year," suggests
Freeman Young, president of Krown Rust Control Systems, a Canadian company
well-known for their vehicle treatment. "And check to make sure that the
process is environmentally safe and the technicians are properly trained."
o
An annual rust
control treatment for an average car costs about $100 and doesn’t void
your manufacturer's warranty.
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