Does road salt affect modern cars?

Does road salt affect modern cars?

Author
Discussion

RacerMDR

Original Poster:

5,496 posts

210 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
I remember back in the day, things that I used to own people would say that the salt on the road in winter destroys the car and bikes for that matter.

What about modern cars - just driven a few hundred miles from up North, my modern car is covered in that nasty salt residue.

Should I be worried? Even on the alloys?

My choice was put it away caked in salt and nicely dry

or

wash it in the dark, minus 3 and put it away wet having done half a job

thoughts?

steveo3002

10,515 posts

174 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
yep it wont do it any favours , modern cars dont rot away like older ones used to but it will get at the alloys and stuff

jbi

12,671 posts

204 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
eats the paint as well

kambites

67,547 posts

221 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
jbi said:
eats the paint as well
eek What manufacturer makes paint that reacts with salt?

matty_doh

796 posts

178 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
I would just give it a quick rinse (No actual washing or drying or anything) it to get the worst off and leave washing it till it's more appropriate.

rallycross

12,787 posts

237 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
Salt very much affects them!

just take a look underneath a 3 yr old scottish car and then take a look under the same model/age car but in SE england, what a difference.

All the main structure and paintwork will be fine but look at the brackets, hangers, nuts and bolts, suspension arms/disks/hubs, the salt really attacks all the unprotected metal (and alloys).

Paintwork should be fine as long as not chipped or scuffed.


Welshbeef

49,633 posts

198 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
Let me get this right some of you would wash your car every day throughout winter after the daily commute in the dark in sub zero.


60

1,479 posts

187 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
Welshbeef said:
Let me get this right some of you would wash your car every day throughout winter after the daily commute in the dark in sub zero.
Must make the road interesting the next day when the water has frozen over.

randomwalk

534 posts

164 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
Ive seen 10 yr old Mercedes with visible rust and heard of RX8's with rusty sills. Driving the car in winter after the roads are salted is like washing it with salt water if it is wet, the salt will get into every little crevice and stay there even after a wash you cannot get it all out from underneath. Run your finger along the car and taste it, you can def taste the salt.

kambites

67,547 posts

221 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
I'm not sure I've ever seen a 10 year-old Mercedes without visible rust. hehe

Thorburn

2,399 posts

193 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
Welshbeef said:
Let me get this right some of you would wash your car every day throughout winter after the daily commute in the dark in sub zero.
Not the daily driver, but whenever I drove my Elise in the winter I'd give it a quick once over when I got home.

The wheels in particular are showing signs of corrosion and need a refurb.

Manks

26,271 posts

222 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
randomwalk said:
Ive seen 10 yr old Mercedes with visible rust and heard of RX8's with rusty sills. Driving the car in winter after the roads are salted is like washing it with salt water if it is wet, the salt will get into every little crevice and stay there even after a wash you cannot get it all out from underneath. Run your finger along the car and taste it, you can def taste the salt.
Is it acceptable just to lick the car? I am concerned about the hygiene implications of licking my fingers.

randomwalk

534 posts

164 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
I was going to say lick lick the car, dont know what the neighbours would think of that. Also in this cold might get tongue stuck to car.

jbi

12,671 posts

204 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
kambites said:
jbi said:
eats the paint as well
eek What manufacturer makes paint that reacts with salt?
It can cause blistering after prolonged exposure

ShadownINja

76,341 posts

282 months

Sunday 28th November 2010
quotequote all
jbi said:
kambites said:
jbi said:
eats the paint as well
eek What manufacturer makes paint that reacts with salt?
It can cause blistering after prolonged exposure
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that the metal underneath the paint reacting (rusting) and releasing gasses, and causing the paint to distort rather than the paint itself reacting?

If I am correct, then this is your "Ambiwlans moment".

Edited by ShadownINja on Sunday 28th November 23:45

Larry Dickman

3,762 posts

218 months

Monday 29th November 2010
quotequote all
kambites said:
jbi said:
eats the paint as well
eek What manufacturer makes paint that reacts with salt?
And Pigeon st & volcanic ash.

Esprit

6,370 posts

283 months

Monday 29th November 2010
quotequote all
Just check out my rebuild thread in the Elise forum to see what sorta damage road salt does to even a pampered, seldom-driven car.

Horrid stuff.

jbi

12,671 posts

204 months

Monday 29th November 2010
quotequote all
ShadownINja said:
jbi said:
kambites said:
jbi said:
eats the paint as well
eek What manufacturer makes paint that reacts with salt?
It can cause blistering after prolonged exposure
Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that the metal underneath the paint reacting (rusting) and releasing gasses, and causing the paint to distort rather than the paint itself reacting?

If I am correct, then this is your "Ambiwlans moment".

Edited by ShadownINja on Sunday 28th November 23:45
http://www.hmgpaint.com/knowledge-base/blistering-the-causes-and-prevention smile

Edited by jbi on Monday 29th November 08:24

cptsideways

13,544 posts

252 months

Monday 29th November 2010
quotequote all
Yes very much so

Check out most 10 year old Japanese imported cars where they use glycol (generally) V uk cars of the same age with Salt

This is a 12 year Jap Honda straight out of Japan, to honest this is about the same as 3 year old UK car






Edited by cptsideways on Monday 29th November 09:32

Bonefish Blues

26,645 posts

223 months

Monday 29th November 2010
quotequote all
As an MX 5 owner - yes.