I was going to say just surface rust. Yep, that was my thought. Surface rust under the left-rear taillight, a little surface rust here and there. Nothing big. I popped open the trunk to take off the taillight, and figured I'd empty the trunk out and have a look-see. How could I have NOT done this before? Like when buying the car in December? The trunk has flow-through ventilation on the left side. Several small holes, one area much bigger. I don't know how to weld, so am considering cutting out a section and bonding a patch panel in with adhesive. I think I'll toss that over in my mind once or twice, and see where to get a patch panel for the trunk floor. Anyway, it's time to rethink this. If the trunk has perforation, then there might be some in the floorboards, too. When under the car, I didn't see any rust through at all. It looked great! But it might be working from the inside out. There are some gaps in the gasket for the front and rear windows, and I noticed water getting in when I washed it. I keep it garaged, and the previous owner kept it in a carport. But I noticed that in the carport rain leaked through a section in the carport, went down the rear of the roof of the car, travelled down the back glass (there was a clear streak in all the dust, showing the path), then travelled along the trunk line down to the left rear taillight. It also must have pooled in the left rear portion of the trunk - that's where it's rusted. Anyway - I need to decide what to tackle first. The surface rust on the outside of the car - or the snazzy ventilated trunk. We leave on vacation next Thursday, so I need to move all the parts I took off for the head, and get the car back in the garage. It can't sit out waiting for the next rain. On Sat, Aug 2, 2008 at 4:10 PM, <Wrambler242@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Uh, I got to ask. > How bad is this rust? > Is it surface or perforations? > Perforations will not stay patched with simple body filler. > It is not water proof. > If you have perforations you are going to want at the very minimum some waterproof filler. > Such as Duraglas or similar. > The correct way is to remover the rusted area and weld in new metal. Barring that being possible a thorough rust removal with sanding grinding then sealing the holes with the Duraglas and back sealing the area with an undercoat will do a satisfatory job and hold up for quite some time. > Start in an area with the least visibility and work up. That way your best work will be in the visible areas. > > -- > Mark Price > Morgantown, WV > 1969 AMC Rambler, 4.0L, EFI, T-5 > 2004 Grand Cherokee Laredo, 4.7L, Quadratrc II > " Chronic Pain Hurts" > > -------------- Original message ---------------------- _______________________________________________ Amc-list mailing list Amc-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://splatter.wps.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/amc-list