Date: Thu, 2 Oct 2003 19:35:42 -0400
Reply-To: Milo's Kitchen <sagmoore@ZOOMINTERNET.NET>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Milo's Kitchen <sagmoore@ZOOMINTERNET.NET>
Subject: Re: exhaust / Rust Prevention
In-Reply-To: <3F7C0C28.9050604@fyi.net>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Hey George,
WE live in and drive Vanagons in the rust-belt too. I think Zelienople and
Plum Boro qualify as the Pittsburgh area as well. Between Eric and me, we
have a fleet of Vanagons. Does that make us astute? No doubt though, you are
eruditer than me, my man, to quote a source.;) (and where were you anyway?)
Dave
-----Original Message-----
From: Vanagon Mailing List [mailto:vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com]On Behalf
Of Eric Zeno
Sent: Thursday, October 02, 2003 7:30 AM
To: vanagon@GERRY.VANAGON.COM
Subject: Re: exhaust / Rust Prevention
George,
I am insulted and astonish at your opening line!!! I live in the
burgh....
and there are several here who drive Vanagons. You don't get out
much do you? Last weekend there was a VW show here, and several
Vanagons were there. Where were you?
Eric
George Goff wrote:
>LISTSERV@GERRY.VANAGON.COM wrote:
>
>
>
>>Date: Wed, 1 Oct 2003 01:19:37 +0000
>>From: Mary Barbara <marybiba@HOTMAIL.COM>
>>Subject: exhaust
>>Has anyone used a ceramic coated or powder coated exhaust system? . . .
>>
>>
>I've just rusted out
>
>
>>mine (lasted 4 years) and am looking for options.
>>Mary
>>
>
>Mary, dear lady, try peanut oil. When you stop laughing, you can read the
>whys and wherefores of my odd recommendation.
>
>In my burg, there is only one other brilliant soul who is astute enough to
>drive a Vanagon. We'll call him The Tube Guru because that is his
professional
>handle. In all things he is the most fastidious person I have ever met and
he
>shames me by running a pristine '84 daily on our salt soaked highways of
>western PA. Preventative maintenance is an obsession for him and his van
shows
>the result of his efforts. As a kid, he rust-proofed cars, so he is ever
>diligent with all aspects of keeping a car rust-free, no mean feat where we
live.
>
>Tube recently had an exhaust system installed (before it broke anywhere, of
>course) and while coveting the stainless steel tailpipe I had fabricated,
he
>expressed his dismay with how quickly the exhaust system starts to rust. I
>related my experience with various painted exhaust systems on bikes and
explained
>the best thing I had found was to coat them with hydraulic oil. That trick
>came from a sprint car owner I knew and probably the only reason he used
>hydraulic oil was because he had a bucket of it sitting around. The
exhaust pipes
>have to be oiled as they cool, not when they are hot and it has to be
applied
>several times.
>
>This discussion eventually led to a thought I had about using peanut oil on
>exhaust headers. I use peanut oil in a cast iron Dutch oven for deep
frying
>and long ago I had noticed the impervious coating which eventually formed
on all
>surfaces of the pot that did not see the cooking flame directly. Since I
am
>too undisciplined to endure such a regimen, the idea always resided in the
>future, but, Tube glommed on to it. I gave him a gallon of spent peanut
oil
>which he has experimentally applied to his tailpipe and J-pipe. The
preliminary
>results are promising enough for him to start coating the rest of the
system.
>
>A dark charcoal gray coating has formed on the treated parts and as wet as
it
>has been, there is still no rusting. We'll really see what comes of this
all
>when spring arrives.
>
>One precaution: Tube applies the oil with a brush and, knowing him, I'm
>certain he is quite neat about it. The oil could wreak havoc with the OXS
if it
>finds it way into a leaky exhaust joint.
>
>George
>
>
>
>
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