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For The Body Shop Guys: Galvanizing

Discussion in 'Builds and Fabricators Forum' started by Chilly, Oct 26, 2018.

  1. Chilly

    Chilly Active Member

    I'm understanding YJ amd later Jeeps had galvanized body panels. How does one safely stitch on repair panels to newer vehicles?
     
  2. Fly Navy

    Fly Navy Member

    LOTS of ventilation!! You can mitigate the fumes a little bit by grinding back where you are going to weld but that won't eliminate them entirely. I usually move things like that outside if I have to weld them. The down side there is any wind will blow your shielding gas away.

    Oh, and wear a mask or a respirator if you have one.
     
  3. Rich M.

    Rich M. Shoe salesman 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Ditto. Respirator mandatory. Old timers say to drink milk first. Dunno what that's about.
     
  4. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    Then why is my YJ rusting?
     
  5. Chilly

    Chilly Active Member

    Same reason the galvanized hood and rood of my F250 rusted, I guess.

    I dont know if all panels were galvanized, or just certain ones, or none. Just what I read on the interweb.
     
  6. matt johnson

    matt johnson Caretaker of family Jeeps

    IMO galvanized metal is a joke, on autos, pipes, bolts, nuts, metal corrugated siding. It will ALL rust... never have understood why it is even still sold much less the theory behind it. It will rust. Thank you for letting me vent/ share.
     
  7. sterlclan

    sterlclan Member 2024 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    grind it really good while wearing protection , and ventilation. the milk does nothing just an old dead welders tale
     
    47v6, Twin2 and ITLKSEZ like this.
  8. Chilly

    Chilly Active Member

    Well, it actually works. For a while. Its purpose is to stave off galvanic corrosion. In galvanic corrosion some metals act as an anode, others as a cathode. Which metal takes which role depends on number of free electrodes on each metal atom. The anode is the metal that ends up corroding. Zinc has a LOT of free electrons so when in contact with other metals it always ends up being the one that corrodes. On ar panels the zinc begins to corrode upon contact with air (paint chips, where fasteners are screwed in, etc). Unfortunately in performing its job the zinc is itself consumed by galvanic corrosion, making the ultimate sacrifice to buy time for the steel. Once consumed the steel is nezt in line to corrode.

    Many boat motors have a zinc bar attached to the lower unit to protect the cast aluminum. Make sure it does, and that its in decent shape if you store your boat in the water. Ships have zinc bars the size of bricks bolted here and there to the inside of the hull.
    So zinc plating works but we have to do our part in covering it once exposed if it is to last, and most importantly: MAINTAIN YOUR GROUNDING STRAPS AND STRAP CONNECTIONS.
     
    Bowbender likes this.
  9. sterlclan

    sterlclan Member 2024 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    I fight this issue on the glass tubbed rigs we have, the battery posts seem to take it hard. I have run dedicated grounds to everything and poor grounds still rear their ugly heads.
     
  10. y2k-fxst

    y2k-fxst Member

    Biggest problem with zinc plating/galvanizing body panels is the thickness of the coating that can be applied. It will maybe do some protection but, it is so thin that it does not have much to give of itself. To me galvanized body panels are a marketing gimmick.Now, hot dipped frames are a different subject, especially if they are also top coated. It's a relatively ugly coating but, has some real meat to it!
     
  11. Howard Eisenhauer

    Howard Eisenhauer Administrator Staff Member

    That's only really a thing if your jeep spends a lot of time submerged in salt water; lots of free ions in salt water just waiting for a chance to latch onto molecules in position A and transport them to Position B. Sitting out in the (relatively) dry air with no free ions to speak of this really isn't an issue. Zinc coating on steel is really intended to seal the steel away from moisture and oxygen in the air the promotes rust, anti- oxidation rather than anti galvanic corrosion.

    Now where you do have two dis-similar metals (galvanicly speaking) in contact with each other you can, under damp conditions, get galvanic corrosion, Land Rovers are infamous for this. But on an all steel jeep it's not a happening thing.

    For your reading enjoyment something sort of related from when I was younger & better looking-

    Google Groups
     
  12. Chilly

    Chilly Active Member

    Except for currents running through your body.
     
  13. rejeep

    rejeep Well-Known Member 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    From what I use to know and prob forgot... the coating on YJ parts was more electrolysis coating rather than Hot dip galvy...

    Hot dip works...
     
  14. PeteL

    PeteL If it wasn't for physics, and law enforcement... 2024 Sponsor 2023 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor


    That would be every day all winter, on the roads here in New Hampshire.
     
  15. Bowbender

    Bowbender I'm workin' on it!

    ...and Minnesnowta…..
     
  16. sterlclan

    sterlclan Member 2024 Sponsor 2022 Sponsor

    And Maine hence the attractiveness of some sort of oily coating to seal out the salty wetness.