Jump to content

A tip regarding the glass and stainless on your car


Seafoam65

Recommended Posts

                   I recently had a disaster on my 1970 Chevelle SS 396 that I thought I would share and perhaps save

others a lot of misery. My Chevelle which is a serious no.1 condition show car developed  some valve problems which

required me to pull the cylinder heads and redo the valves, and while I was at it I decided to get the A/C working with new

A/C hoses, compressor, evap core, condensor etc. I got mostly finished with everything and then got really busy and the car

was just sitting in one of the front bays in my shop for about a year, in which time it got covered with dust which was very thick.

I didn't have a cover on the car because in my shop we've had a problem with crickets getting under the cover and crapping on the paint,

and leaving spots in the paint that are impossible to get out, so I thought I would leave the cover off while it was sitting there. My shop

is on an extremely busy street with a very high traffic count. I finally got back on the car and finished up the mechanical repairs, and then proceeded

to wash the car to get all the dust off and wax it. This is when I discovered that both the windshield and rear window on the car had thousands of

deep pits in them like it had been through a sand storm. Also the stainless trim around the glass had the same deep pits in them. The side windows

were OK, and the paint had no damage whatsoever. I figured out that the dust on the car was not really ordinary dust, but the result of the car exhaust

soot that was blowing into the shop from the busy street 75 feet away. The chemicals in this car exhaust dust destroyed the glass and the stainless

trim on the car but did nothing to the paint or chrome. I now never allow any dust to build up on my cars when they are in the shop for any reason....

i dust them off every couple of days with a California Car Duster. I'm really disgusted because I had already put all new glass in the car just a few years ago.

The stainless trim will have to be sanded down and polished to remove the pits....what a PITA! I'm still amazed that this could happen......I always thought that

dust could not harm your car, it would just wash right off......I now know that is not the case.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I've never head of such a thing before.  I 'm surprised road dust would cause such extensive damage. 

 

Could it be that some a truck drove by venting some harsh chemical? 

 

Or that a corrosive chemical drifted down from above, pitting the windshield and back glass?  That might explain why the side glass was not affected.

 

Good luck getting the damage fixed.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

                         No grinding, the car was off by itself nothing going on within 25 yards of it, no harsh chemicals being sprayed, what was on it looked

like regular dust. It had to be the chemicals coming out of the tailpipes of the vehicles driving by. I agree it doesn't make sense that the paint wasn't 

ruined but the paint still looks absolutely perfect. It had a lot of wax on it that might have protected the paint.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

No idea as to the cause of that, but ditto on the metal grinding!  Not long ago I was mindlessly cutting through a piece of angle iron about ten feet from my showroom perfect '83 Turbo Thunderbird (I know,I know, but in my defense an absolutely awesome ride) and completely ruined the front & right side glass. Everywhere a spark touched glass or plastic melted a tiny pit into it without damaging the paint whatsoever.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Years ago my company washed and repaired a high rise bldg in Ft Lee Nj. Really windy. The chemical we were using was ammonium bi flouride ( not available anymore). The wind drift caused the chemical to land on cars below; even tho we had guys stationed on the ground with water hoses, the metal trim of certain cars was damaged beyond repair. The only cars damaged? Mercedes Benz. We were working over a stock brokerage company. Any exposed stainless , mirrors, trim, around the headlights ( this was 30 years ago) was ruined. What a lawsuit!!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...