Body Guy's Help

gl4787

<-- just sits
Jan 27, 2009
274
0
0
WI
So I found a spot a little smaller than a dime on my roof that's started bubbling up. What do I do? Every where else I've found rust I've been able to replace (doors, fender, tail gate). I guess I could always just put in a glass roof. haha.
 

dirtydmax

<---up shit creek
Sep 1, 2013
1,091
4
38
46
muskoka,Ont Canada
Sandblast,prep,paint.do it all the time at work and there is no other way to fix this one.depending on where it is the glass might have to come out as well.If the metal isn't pitted to bad from rust you might be able to skip the sandblast part but if it is use a speedblast, (a small sandblaster not to warp the metal)Good luck with the fix.
 

Muff

Just Learning
Oct 7, 2013
1,063
0
36
Butler, Pa
Sandblast,prep,paint.do it all the time at work and there is no other way to fix this one.depending on where it is the glass might have to come out as well.If the metal isn't pitted to bad from rust you might be able to skip the sandblast part but if it is use a speedblast, (a small sandblaster not to warp the metal)Good luck with the fix.

x2 :thumb:
 

gl4787

<-- just sits
Jan 27, 2009
274
0
0
WI
Ehhh... So glass roof it is then. haha. I'm not enough of a body guy to do that. Would a body shop do that kind of job?
 

workin' diesel

factory tuned
Nov 13, 2010
630
0
0
Coalhust, AB Canada
Either that or you get a kit from an auto parts store that goes on your drill. Has little 2" circles of different grits and comes with easy to use directions. Then get the touch up paint. It is on your roof, who cares what it looks like as long as it stops the rust!
 

gl4787

<-- just sits
Jan 27, 2009
274
0
0
WI
I was under the impression that there's no actual "stopping rust". Ill do whatever I have to, this trucks going to be with me until I die.
 

Muff

Just Learning
Oct 7, 2013
1,063
0
36
Butler, Pa
I was under the impression that there's no actual "stopping rust". Ill do whatever I have to, this trucks going to be with me until I die.

Correct "you can't fix rust" it will always come back. You just bandaid it.
 

'strokeThis_'07

New member
Oct 2, 2009
107
0
0
Laramie, WY
You absolutely CAN fix rust.

If it's rusted through, you have to cut it out and replace with new metal. If it's compromised the primer only, you can strip that area down and refinish it.

If it's rusted through, the little bit you see, there's 5 times that hidden underneath.

Take a grinder and grind the area down to bare metal, see if it's just spot rust or larger, then take a DA sander and feather it out. Prime with a good etching primer. Pretty much you're going to need to refinish the entire roof.
 

Muff

Just Learning
Oct 7, 2013
1,063
0
36
Butler, Pa
I'm not one to argue on these forums but if the panel is already impregnated with rust it'll happen again even if you take all the right steps to prevent it.

Welding in a new panel, in a previously rusted area will yield a longer fix but will eventually rust out again due to the heating and cooling of when you welded the new panel in.

Using fusor to glue in a new panel is always the best shot to making it last as long as possible.

I'm no chemical engineer so I could be wrong. Just speaking from previous experience. I Would like to hear more about how you guys prevent it from reoccurring.
 

Dozerboy

Well-known member
Jun 23, 2009
4,892
470
83
TX of course
Would just sand it down and touch it up. Ya it will come back, but you will slow it down considerably.


Sent from a ditch being dug near you using Tapatalk
 

gardnerteam

New member
Apr 10, 2014
12
0
1
Bend, Oregon
To stop rust on a Wisconsin or Michigan vehicle, take it apart down to its smallest piece, sand blast to clean bare metal, POWDERCOAT it, paint exterior painted surfaces to color choice, reassemble, and use for the next 200 years plus without worry. There are a few of us who are doing classic cars who powdercoat ANYTHING and EVERYTHING metal (undersides, insides, outside, frames, bodies, - you name it) prior to final paint to avoid metal contact with the elements. Seems to work. Wisconsin cars I have done (doing one right now) are the worst we ever see. The Patron Saint of Rust must call Wisconsin home.
 

'strokeThis_'07

New member
Oct 2, 2009
107
0
0
Laramie, WY
Where is the rust? I'm guessing either around the marker lights, around the windshield, or the channels that hold water.

All of these are moisture retention areas. Somewhere the paint and primer was compromised, thus you got rust. Ultimately to fix it and ensure it doesn't come back, you need to strip the entire roof, cut out the rusted-through portion, and see how much of the structure is rusted. Rust is like an iceberg, you only see a portion of what is really there.

If you don't fix the underlying rust, it's going to eat from the inside and reoccur. Guaranteed. Also, if you have moisture retention in that adhesive foam that OEMs use to separate panels and reduce noise transfer (and I'm pretty sure GM uses it under the roof skin, been years since I did a roof skin or anyone in the shop did one on a GM truck), it's all got to be removed, and the source of moisture removed.