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I've bought a second hand car which has the oil/grease coating style protection. I've been advised that the Krown is much better as it protects in areas the oil coating can't reach. Is this BS? Can I apply the Krown over the other coating?

2006-08-31 13:52:40 · 3 answers · asked by Jam&cream 1 in Cars & Transportation Maintenance & Repairs

3 answers

My experience with this is that the oil based substance will not allow the other rustproofing to adhere adequately, meaning you'd have to strip the old stuff off first. My advice? Don't worry about it too much. I think the stock rustproofing should be ok. Save your money for something else.

Hope this helped.

2006-08-31 14:13:33 · answer #1 · answered by answerman63 5 · 0 0

They usually spray Krown not just on the bottom, but inside fenders and doors and other panels. So if it won't stick to the oil it's not a big deal - those areas will be protected by oil and the krown will stay in other areas. I'd not say that the Krown offers long lasting protection, it only works if you reapply it regularly, it stinks and drips a lot after applying. I'd use some other stuff.

2006-08-31 15:37:45 · answer #2 · answered by svthech 4 · 0 0

I would use RustSeal by KBS Coatings. It is seriously that good.http://www.kbs-coatings.com/KBS-RustSeal-C37.aspx

2006-08-31 16:06:01 · answer #3 · answered by bonksteronline 3 · 0 0

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