Brad Hearing
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Brad
- Joined
- Jun 16, 2024
- Threads
- 42
- Messages
- 697
- Reaction score
- 1,003
- Location
- Alberta Canada
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 Sahara V6 auto
- Thread starter
- #1
This is what a rubberized undercoating rust prevention looks like for a 2024 Sahara with 3000km on it.
I wish I had the factory bottom to show off as a before but sadly I didn't even think this would be a problem. Just like all of us, I did this for the same reason we do all things; it seemed like a good idea at the time. I did zero research and was in for something else like buying the goddamn thing but the cost was low and hey why not right?
Now lets be clear - I want to pick a fight here. Everyone else is all "blah blah blah not to be offensive" when they start talking but well the heck darn with that I'm going to be offensive by golly whether you like it or not if that's OK.
Alright. I get the job done and decide do to research which I'm told you should never do and instead trust the science but without even having the monitor turned on trying to search google I could see something was amiss.
Rubberized undercoating is basically what you do when you want to cover up problems or make something look good, say for an older 1960s car which would totally get you laid if you had one but you don't and its for the best because the only thing on the marketplace for these beauties is someones father trying to get rid of it because the frame rotted and he didn't tell anyone yet. Also he totally got laid in it all the time.
As for the rest of us losers its a bad choice; even if done perfectly rubberized anything dries out, rots, chips, gets hit by rocks (thanks for nothing, tires!) and traps water right where it needs to be if you hate your jeep - right along the [insert part you love here that was rubberized like the frame or in same cases the whole damn thing].
So anyway it turns out its not so easy to remove unless you like harsh chemicals all over the place where rubber exists, and so what you need is magic in the form of dry-ice coldness that freezes the crap off so it flakes off and......well magic! Now lets be clear... I'm not going to pretend i know what im talking about here. All I know is that the guy got rid of it then covered it with wax WHICH I DID RESEARCH BEFOREHAND THANKS FOR ASKING. GEEZ.
Now my garage smells like a goddamn beehive but that's only for the next few days which is good because I really, really hate anything that smells like a hexagon.
Here's the final pic, thanks for asking:
As you can see, some things are colored differently than before. I'm told this is a good thing and spent loads of money.
I wish I had the factory bottom to show off as a before but sadly I didn't even think this would be a problem. Just like all of us, I did this for the same reason we do all things; it seemed like a good idea at the time. I did zero research and was in for something else like buying the goddamn thing but the cost was low and hey why not right?
Now lets be clear - I want to pick a fight here. Everyone else is all "blah blah blah not to be offensive" when they start talking but well the heck darn with that I'm going to be offensive by golly whether you like it or not if that's OK.
Alright. I get the job done and decide do to research which I'm told you should never do and instead trust the science but without even having the monitor turned on trying to search google I could see something was amiss.
Rubberized undercoating is basically what you do when you want to cover up problems or make something look good, say for an older 1960s car which would totally get you laid if you had one but you don't and its for the best because the only thing on the marketplace for these beauties is someones father trying to get rid of it because the frame rotted and he didn't tell anyone yet. Also he totally got laid in it all the time.
As for the rest of us losers its a bad choice; even if done perfectly rubberized anything dries out, rots, chips, gets hit by rocks (thanks for nothing, tires!) and traps water right where it needs to be if you hate your jeep - right along the [insert part you love here that was rubberized like the frame or in same cases the whole damn thing].
So anyway it turns out its not so easy to remove unless you like harsh chemicals all over the place where rubber exists, and so what you need is magic in the form of dry-ice coldness that freezes the crap off so it flakes off and......well magic! Now lets be clear... I'm not going to pretend i know what im talking about here. All I know is that the guy got rid of it then covered it with wax WHICH I DID RESEARCH BEFOREHAND THANKS FOR ASKING. GEEZ.
Now my garage smells like a goddamn beehive but that's only for the next few days which is good because I really, really hate anything that smells like a hexagon.
Here's the final pic, thanks for asking:
As you can see, some things are colored differently than before. I'm told this is a good thing and spent loads of money.
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