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Thread: Rust under brand new 90

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tombie View Post
    No it's not!
    My 2001 defender didn't have one and had no rust when I sold it.... 3 years ago.
    It spent it's life offroad in mud, on gibbers, gravel and sand tracks and the beach.
    All it got was a good wash after each trip with Salt Assault.
    Agree
    My 1998 110 has no rust at all and I live by the sea.

    Sorry but worked for land rover and found out that these things up there with the redesigned beer can for your air intake. If they are that good they would be in the Uk where they have a real rust problem unlike Australia which really does not have a rust problem. And guess what they are no where to be seen in Europe


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  2. #12
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    Had the same thing on my 110 when I picked it up - looked closely at the underside as had been alerted to the issue by this forum.

    Back to dealer - LRA contacted & came out to inspect it. All repaired as a warranty issue.

    Just beware - I was told by the dealer that the anti corrosion warranty only covers the body panels, not the drivetrain etc.

    Also found metal sworf everywhere - under mats, door sills, in roof lining near alpine windows etc.

    Having said that - enjoy the truck!

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by akelly View Post
    Slightly OT but I just bought a 130 ('99 model) that is fitted with one of those electronic rust prevention jobbies (PM me if you want the brand name). I've always wondered how effective these are - now I know... There is little bits an pieces of rust specks here and there on the steel parts - nothing serious and certainly to be expected on cars on the coast that are 10 years old - but bottom line is that the rust prevention magic box is doing stuff all on this car...YMMV.

    Cheers,

    Adam
    I have no personal experience with these but was told that all panels doors etc should have an earth strap back to the chassis for maximum effectiveness.Electrolysis would be the biggest issue with LandRovers however with Alloy panels directly in contact with ungalvanised steel parts, so maybe Zinc anodes bolted here and there would be better.
    Wagoo.

  4. #14
    solmanic's Avatar
    solmanic is offline One Merc post away from being banned...
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    I actually never even saw my new Defender before the rust protection goo was sprayed underneath. I was advised to have the vehicle trucked directly to the rust-proofing mob who did a full steam clean before applying the muck.

    As others have pointed out, there are reasons why new vehicles (not just Defenders) get rust on them during shipping. My question would be why the hell don't our Land Rover dealers get them properly cleaned after they arrive as part of the pre-delivery crap we are forced to pay for?!

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by wagoo View Post
    <snip>maybe Zinc anodes bolted here and there would be better.
    Wagoo.
    My chemistry is a bit hazy, but I'm pretty sure that sacrificial anodes need to be immersed in an electrolyte to work.

  6. #16
    halfshaft Guest

    Doors

    I thought i would do the right thing on my 90 after having it for about 6 months and give it a squirt of wax as my previous county had a bit of cancer. it is a 2003 model and it was in 2006 i was set to wax it. pulled off the door trims to do inside the doors and the rust in the bottom of the doors had already eaten straight through the metal frames on the bottom of the doors. bit of a shock to say the least. previous owner was definately not an off roader so can only be put down to being factory installed rust. CHECK YOUR DOORS AS WELL

  7. #17
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    Thanks for all the input guys. I'd hoped that my first posts would have been about other fun things to do with my Landy, after reading so much on this forum.

    Not to bitch, but to personally be honest, I'm amazed that they handed the car over to me like this. I know most people would be shocked to see the amount of rust under this thing. It's on most parts, popping out through the paint. If I had been given the opportunity to look over the car before I paid for it, I wouldn't have bought it.

    More so than a warranty issue, surely this is a consumer protection issue? I had a brief read, I think this comes under Consumer Guarantees: Acceptable Quality "free from defects" and "acceptable in appearance and finish"

    I have faith the dealer will help. They have been great so far, so i'm keeping positive. I'll post up the outcome when it's resolved.

  8. #18
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    Quote Originally Posted by RVR110 View Post
    My chemistry is a bit hazy, but I'm pretty sure that sacrificial anodes need to be immersed in an electrolyte to work.
    I'm not sure either, but don't they bolt blocks of zinc as sacrificial anodes to ships to slow down corrosion?
    Wagoo.

  9. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by wagoo View Post
    I'm not sure either, but don't they bolt blocks of zinc as sacrificial anodes to ships to slow down corrosion?
    Wagoo.
    They do. However as mentioned, sacrificial anodes immersed in salt water can protect an entire hull. Sacrificial anodes bolted to steel in air will only protect an area about 5 -10 mm larger in diameter than the bare steel they are in direct contact with. This goes for galvanised areas as well - A bare steel circle of 5 mm or less in diameter on a gal panel will not corrode. Up to ~ 10 mm you will only get minor surface rusting (if I remember the images in my undergrad chem text books).

    I think the propensity for land rovers to rust is appaling. Subaru manage to zinc plate most panels on subaru 4x4s (IRC they claim 90% of the body by weight is zinc plated).

  10. #20
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    Quote Originally Posted by wagoo View Post
    I'm not sure either, but don't they bolt blocks of zinc as sacrificial anodes to ships to slow down corrosion?
    Wagoo.
    That would be correct, I used to work on ships here in Brisbane, and alot of them have sacrificial anodes.... though they dont completlty protect.

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