- Joined
- Jan 11, 2022
- Posts
- 59
- Reaction score
- 110
- Location
- San Jose, CA
- First Name
- Rob
- Truck Year
- 1976
- Truck Model
- K20
- Engine Size
- 400
I must be the last person who has discovered this, but just in case there is one last soul out there that hasn't, I wanted to pass this along.
I had some parts that I was going to media blast, but a few items are assemblies that can't easily be taken apart, like hood latches, parking brake assembly, seat sliders, etc. The media blast wouldn't work well since it can't reach all the nooks and crannies. I was watching the Kevin Tetz YouTube channel and he used Evapo-Rust to clean up some seat tracks.
So, I bought 2 gallons of Evapo-Rust and dumped it in a plastic bin, just large enough for the largest item I want to soak. I was pretty skeptical, but I'm now 100% convinced this stuff works. Below are some pictures of the parts I soaked over the weekend.
I wish I had a before/after of the latch and parking brake assemblies. They looked just like the seat slider (rusty) in the pictures. Now, they look almost new.
One seat slider is soaking now. The depth of the solution isn't quite deep enough, so I have to soak one side, flip over, and soak again. I've been letting each item soak for 24hrs. It is a very slow process, so you can't be in a rush. The best part is this was all effortless. All I did was dunk the parts. I didn't wire brush or scrub.
After soaking, I rinsed them with water, and then sprayed them with Eastwood "After Blast", which is a bare metal etch that leaves a zinc phosphate coating to keep it from rusting. Next step is to prime and paint.
Also, the stuff is reusable. You can pour it back into the original jugs and use again.
Hood Latch:
Note how it didn't remove the rubber coating over the handle area.
Parking Brake:
Seat Slider (before soaking):
Seat slider - In process. One side soaked
I had some parts that I was going to media blast, but a few items are assemblies that can't easily be taken apart, like hood latches, parking brake assembly, seat sliders, etc. The media blast wouldn't work well since it can't reach all the nooks and crannies. I was watching the Kevin Tetz YouTube channel and he used Evapo-Rust to clean up some seat tracks.
So, I bought 2 gallons of Evapo-Rust and dumped it in a plastic bin, just large enough for the largest item I want to soak. I was pretty skeptical, but I'm now 100% convinced this stuff works. Below are some pictures of the parts I soaked over the weekend.
I wish I had a before/after of the latch and parking brake assemblies. They looked just like the seat slider (rusty) in the pictures. Now, they look almost new.
One seat slider is soaking now. The depth of the solution isn't quite deep enough, so I have to soak one side, flip over, and soak again. I've been letting each item soak for 24hrs. It is a very slow process, so you can't be in a rush. The best part is this was all effortless. All I did was dunk the parts. I didn't wire brush or scrub.
After soaking, I rinsed them with water, and then sprayed them with Eastwood "After Blast", which is a bare metal etch that leaves a zinc phosphate coating to keep it from rusting. Next step is to prime and paint.
Also, the stuff is reusable. You can pour it back into the original jugs and use again.
Hood Latch:
Note how it didn't remove the rubber coating over the handle area.
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Parking Brake:
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Seat Slider (before soaking):
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Seat slider - In process. One side soaked
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