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Rail Road Dust???
what is the best way to remove it from the paint?
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is it coal dust or is it oily from the exhaust?
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clay bar, then usea light polishing compound by hand Tom (your good at that anhow we hear)...I had some on a ford truck I didnt see, it started rusting underneath the film :mad: had to remove kit, have the hood buffed and then reapply.
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Rail dust is a bigger problem with a white vehicle then others because it stands out. The previous post was right about clay bar and a cleaner wax.
If the vehicle is under warranty take it back to the dealer- free detailing. Don't be shocked if it comes back especially on white and in salty air environments. |
what is rail road dust?
We only have wagons here:rolleyes: |
rail dust is when the cars are transported by trains, the steel wheels on the train and the iron rail of the track create friction and small amounts of hot iron dust settle on the horizontal surfaces of the car and melt in to the paint and rust, on light color car like white it looks like tiny specks reddish brown (rust) in color. the clay bars with a lubricant picks up the small iron chips on the surface and the buffing removes the rust stain left behind, i have seen it years ago so bad that you had to refinish. most vehicles are transported with plastic sheets on the horizontal surafaces this day and age so rail dust is seldom a problem but does occur.
later |
Originally Posted by augie58
(Post 2317963)
Rail dust is a bigger problem with a white vehicle then others because it stands out. The previous post was right about clay bar and a cleaner wax.
If the vehicle is under warranty take it back to the dealer- free detailing. Don't be shocked if it comes back especially on white and in salty air environments.
Originally Posted by offshoredrillin
(Post 2317956)
clay bar, then usea light polishing compound by hand Tom (your good at that anhow we hear)...I had some on a ford truck I didnt see, it started rusting underneath the film :mad: had to remove kit, have the hood buffed and then reapply.
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:p
Originally Posted by later
(Post 2318351)
rail dust is when the cars are transported by trains, the steel wheels on the train and the iron rail of the track create friction and small amounts of hot iron dust settle on the horizontal surfaces of the car and melt in to the paint and rust, on light color car like white it looks like tiny specks reddish brown (rust) in color. the clay bars with a lubricant picks up the small iron chips on the surface and the buffing removes the rust stain left behind, i have seen it years ago so bad that you had to refinish. most vehicles are transported with plastic sheets on the horizontal surafaces this day and age so rail dust is seldom a problem but does occur.
later |
Originally Posted by tomtbone1993
(Post 2318368)
Thanks for the info....where can I get a clay bar??
You may try a local Auto Body Supply shop. They can usually be found in the yellow pages. |
Originally Posted by augie58
(Post 2317963)
If the vehicle is under warranty take it back to the dealer- free detailing. Some salesmen get offended, but do you really want the Mexican outback detailing your 50k $ truck? |
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