1964 Crown floor pan
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1964 Crown floor pan



Rust Mort kills and transforms the existing rust, soaking into it.  It turns black and I like that from a psychological and emotional standpoint, even though I don't really know what that actually means, but it seems to be transforming the cancer before my eyes.
 
I then personally put encapsulator on top of the rust mort because I'm really superstitous about miracle rust products, and had to do most of the horizontal exterior surfaces on the weathered sow's-ear that I'm trying to make a silk purse out of, so that's why I got redundant.  Floors are not such a biggie as they're out of sight.
 
POR-15 could be a better bet if you're doing the bottom sides(?) as it's really tough and hard when dry.  Rust Mort & Encapsulator are both easier to apply -  a rag for the 'Mort and a brush for the Encapsulator if you don't want to spray it.
 
-Kenyon

Mark and Theresa Elliott <deadfishe@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Thanks for the info. My plan for the rust was to go over it with my
grinder to get rid of most of it, and then using POR15 to cover up the
floor. Is rust mort/rust encapsulator better? I have no experience with
these types of products. I don't want to have to deal with this rust
again, so I want to use something that will work (short of cutting out the
rust and welding in new metal, since the metal is still good).

As for the bolts, I expect that at least one or two of them will break when
I try to remove them (at least that is how my luck has gone so far). Also
I would guess that they shouldn't be too expensive, and several dollars is
far less expensive then spending the time trying to clean up the current ones.

Mark Elliott
1964 Crown 4dr
At 08:13 AM 8/27/2004 -0700, you wrote:
>Date: Fri, 27 Aug 2004 01:13:57 -0700 (PDT)
>From: Kenyon Wills
>Subject: Re: IML: 1964 Crown floor pan
>Reply-To: mailing-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
>--0-1796424218-1093594437=:88792
>Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
>
>I don't know what that stuff is, but I wire wheeled it off using a grinder
>with a wire rope cupped wheel attachment, used eastwood rust encapsulator
>over rust-mort, and then sprayed undercoating all over and thick. the
>undercoating dampens vibration and road noise, and it's going to be
>invisible under the carpet, so I laid it on thick. Almost as good as
>Dynamat but much less weight.
>
>Your bolts are probably surface rusted? Try bumping them on a wire
>wheel? Re-assemble whatever you put in there with grease on the threads
>and they'll be ready for you to swap out again in 50 years and easier to
>break loose. Mine looked rotten but cleaned up nicely. Since I'm not
>doing much jumping in the old girl, I doubt that there's a tremendous
>amount of stress on those bolts if they're all there and tightened evenly.
>



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