Quick Waxoyl question

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  • widerberg
    Low Range
    • Feb 2010
    • 30

    Quick Waxoyl question

    Hi, All:

    I've read the Waxoyl information on the RN Waxoyl site and searched the Series forum, and I'm pretty sure I know the answer. But, better safe than sorry . . .

    If I have a frame that doesn't appear to have any internal corrosion (because, well, it hasn't rusted through to the outside of the frame), do I simply shoot Professional 120-4 into the frame and leave it at that, or is there some sort of prep required of the inside of the frame prior to injecting the 120-4?

    Many thanks!
    Bo Widerberg
    '73 Land Rover 88"
    '69 VW Bus (Westy)
    '69 VW Beetle
  • crankin
    5th Gear
    • Jul 2008
    • 696

    #2
    The waxoyl can be applied with minimal surface preparation. Clean it if you can.
    Here is thier FAQ:


    Birmabright Brotherhood

    Take the vow, join the brotherhood!


    Clint Rankin - 1972 SIII SWB

    Comment

    • KevinNY
      4th Gear
      • Oct 2006
      • 484

      #3
      I would give the inside a good rinse until water flows from the drain holes clear, then park it on a nice hot driveway for a few days before waxoyl.
      The Goat, 2.8 Daihatsu Td, '73 coil conversion

      Comment

      • TedW
        5th Gear
        • Feb 2007
        • 887

        #4
        Originally posted by KevinNY
        I would give the inside a good rinse until water flows from the drain holes clear, then park it on a nice hot driveway for a few days before waxoyl.
        That's what I did 15 years ago, and still no rust on my year-round Maine driver.

        I touch up the outside yearly and respray the insides every 2-3 years.

        Comment

        • swray
          Low Range
          • Nov 2007
          • 16

          #5
          Are there any recomendations on how to spray the inside. I see many, what look like, factory holes in the frame. Do you insert the flex wand into to these and systematically spray from the front to the back?
          Steven Wray
          Fishersville, VA
          1965 IIA
          1958 TR3A

          Comment

          • amcordo
            5th Gear
            • Jun 2009
            • 740

            #6
            Last edited by TSR53; 03-09-2010, 10:24 AM. Reason: fixed link so it is enbedded

            Comment

            • JackIIA
              5th Gear
              • Dec 2008
              • 498

              #7
              Great Movie

              Nice Link, didn't know this video was out there. I really should do that to my own VW, let alone the Rover. But looks like it really requires a lift or a pit to do it right on a modern car. Though a IIA/III still seems like a straight shot.
              1970 88 IIA

              Comment

              • widerberg
                Low Range
                • Feb 2010
                • 30

                #8
                Originally posted by KevinNY
                I would give the inside a good rinse until water flows from the drain holes clear, then park it on a nice hot driveway for a few days before waxoyl.
                Hi, Kevin. Great tip. I think I'll do that. I'm really leaning towards breaking the truck down to the frame, so that would be a lot easier to do with just a rolling chassis. The more I look, the more "stuff" I want to replace (rusted fasteners, etc.). Not going for a show truck at all, but I'm realizing as I dig deeper that what I want is a total restoration more than a mechanical rebuild. We'll see how finances and my patience allow all this to play out.

                Would 3 or 4 aerosol cans of Waxoyl 120-4 work for coating the inside, or are the factory holes not distributed/located closely enough to each other to allow proper coverage? My budget being what it is doesn't really allow for buying the whole kit, including spray guns. To start, I'll probably have to go the rattle can route.

                Then again, I also have a Spitfire and a Series 1 XJ6, and they can all use Waxoyl, so in the long run buying the kit will probably be what I do. Just probably not in time for the Landy.
                Bo Widerberg
                '73 Land Rover 88"
                '69 VW Bus (Westy)
                '69 VW Beetle

                Comment

                • widerberg
                  Low Range
                  • Feb 2010
                  • 30

                  #9
                  Originally posted by amcordo
                  Nice video, Tony. Thanks for posting it.
                  Bo Widerberg
                  '73 Land Rover 88"
                  '69 VW Bus (Westy)
                  '69 VW Beetle

                  Comment

                  • TSR53
                    5th Gear
                    • Mar 2006
                    • 733

                    #10
                    Originally posted by JackIIA
                    Nice Link, didn't know this video was out there. I really should do that to my own VW, let alone the Rover. But looks like it really requires a lift or a pit to do it right on a modern car. Though a IIA/III still seems like a straight shot.
                    Exactly. I did this to my 2006 MINI Cooper S R53 and never looked back. It was one of the best preventative mods ever.

                    Cheers, Thompson
                    Art & Creative Director, Rovers Magazine
                    Rovers North, Inc.

                    Comment

                    • TSR53
                      5th Gear
                      • Mar 2006
                      • 733

                      #11
                      Originally posted by widerberg
                      Nice video, Tony. Thanks for posting it.
                      Go Calef! Oscar gold!
                      Cheers, Thompson
                      Art & Creative Director, Rovers Magazine
                      Rovers North, Inc.

                      Comment

                      • Calef
                        Super Moderator
                        • Feb 2007
                        • 16

                        #12
                        Originally posted by widerberg
                        Would 3 or 4 aerosol cans of Waxoyl 120-4 work for coating the inside, or are the factory holes not distributed/located closely enough to each other to allow proper coverage? My budget being what it is doesn't really allow for buying the whole kit, including spray guns. To start, I'll probably have to go the rattle can route.

                        Then again, I also have a Spitfire and a Series 1 XJ6, and they can all use Waxoyl, so in the long run buying the kit will probably be what I do. Just probably not in time for the Landy.
                        Widerberg, Im the guy in the video I do not recommend using the aerosol for cavity application at all. The aerosols do a nice job of surface touch ups, for protecting surface areas during assembly and they are convenient... but they are no substitute for the proper aplication hardware. When you spray the aerosol cans it comes out like cheese wiz, it makes a foam and the aerosol propellent bubbles out and it leaves a thick gel kind of like shaving cream. The spray is uni-directional. It does not fog cavities and the cheeze-wiz texture does not creep or penetrate into the hard to reach spots.

                        The professional application equipment fogs the cavity, with a 360 spray. It applies as a very thin liquid propelled by 110 PSI designed to get into ALL the hard to reach places. Bottom line: the product only works if it gets into the places that need to get protected, the aerosol wont do that. That is why Waxoyl insists on using the pro application tools.

                        If you were contemplating buying the pro kit at some point, buy it early and use it on all your vehicles. Keep in mind, the problem with skimping on the cavity is you wont know you have problems until it is WAAAY to late to fix it easily. Underbody you can scrape the rust off and re-aply... so underbody is not so horrible to use aerosols before you can use the proper pro-tools.

                        Also, you dont need the whole kit (which includes guns and product for both cavity and underbody), you could just buy a 5L tin of 120-4 (RNW5003), the gun (RNWHRS), and long wand (RNW5015)... totaling $331.89 before taxes and shipping. You loose a slight discount on the kit but you don't have to buy it all at once. Then later in your project when you are ready for underbody protection you can get the hardwax (RNW5005) and the hi-flow application gun (AKA "the spray and pray" RNW5017).

                        So that is my 3 cents. Of course any protection is better than no protection so do what you can!

                        Happy Waxoyling!

                        ~Calef Letorney

                        Comment

                        • widerberg
                          Low Range
                          • Feb 2010
                          • 30

                          #13
                          Calef, thanks for the very comprehensive reply. And thanks for the information on the aerosol solution. That would not have been good

                          I suppose I'll have to wait a little while and save up for the "real deal." I know I can use it on all my vehicles, so that's a benefit.

                          One more question, slightly off-topic: I'm noticing a lot of different Waxoyl products when I Google. There's obviously the Waxoyl (R) Professional Car Care system that RN sells. But I've also found a Finnigans Waxoyl and a Hammerite Waxoyl. Are there different formulations? Or different companies licensing the same formula?
                          Bo Widerberg
                          '73 Land Rover 88"
                          '69 VW Bus (Westy)
                          '69 VW Beetle

                          Comment

                          • glbft1
                            1st Gear
                            • Dec 2006
                            • 149

                            #14
                            hey wait a minute, I purchased the cans from rovers north for my 109 and greg told me that was fine to use, now you have somebody saying the cans for inside are not good, whats the deal??

                            Comment

                            • Calef
                              Super Moderator
                              • Feb 2007
                              • 16

                              #15
                              Originally posted by glbft1
                              hey wait a minute, I purchased the cans from rovers north for my 109 and greg told me that was fine to use, now you have somebody saying the cans for inside are not good, whats the deal??
                              I am sorry if you feel you were mis-informed. Greg and I are the two techs here at Rovers North trained by Waxoyl Professional AG of Switzerland. We have spent a great deal of time using and learning about the products so we can consistently provide appropriate advice to customers. I can't comment on what Greg told you or how you interpreted that, however I just spoke with Greg about this and he agreed...

                              We always try to steer people towards the professional equipment, period. That is the only way to achieve optimal results. However, many people do not wish to spend the $ on the equipment and the 5L tin or they do not have the proper application environment. It is for this reason Waxoyl is labeled "for professional use only." If you don't use the pro tools you can't expect the pro results. I can't tell you how often people tell me "well I can't afford the equipment and I don't have a lift and/or compressor. Can't I just take the aerosol and spray that and get some benefit." At that point all we can say is YES. Applying an aerosol is better than nothing.

                              If the choice is between no Waxoyl or Waxoyl from an aerosol, then Waxoyl from an aerosol is clearly better. Especially on the underbody, where the fogging and penetration is not as big a factor like it is in the cavity. If you use an aerosols on the underbody it leaves a different texture, the job is a big mess and you do not have the air pressure to force the product into the cracks, but it is WAY better than nothing. The Aerosol in the cavities is less effective, but still better than nothing.

                              If you wish to speak further, feel free to contact me directly ether on the forum or by calling Rovers North and asking for me. If you have not used the aerosols and you wish to exchange for a pro kit we can certainly do that.

                              OR if you have used the aerosols, there is no reason not to reapply with the pro equipment. In fact, my first intro to Waxoyl 8+ years ago was using 7 or 8 aerosol cans of Hardwax on the underbody of my Land Rover. We didn't know anything about pro equipment or cavity application. Since learning to use the Pro application equipment I have done the full application to my Land Rover 4 or 5 times. This is in part because I drive all year in the VT extreme rusting conditions but more because before I knew of Waxoyl I applied a Wurth product that to this day continues to peal off (taking the waxoyl with it!) exposing a painted chassis... so i touch it up to cover those places before they rust. I think eventually all the Wurth will have pealed off and I will have Waxoyl directly on the frame!

                              The ability to touch up and apply over existing product is a big benefit of Waxoyl. Most other products require a restoration, scraping/ removal to reapply. With Waxoyl, all you have to do is pressure wash and degrease the underbody and you can apply again. The more times you reapply the better as it builds a thicker skin of Waxoyl for more protection and sound/ vibration dampening.

                              Hope that helps, again feel free to contact me directly.

                              Best regards,

                              Calef Letorney

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