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12/07 |
I know there was a discussion on oil and stuff and I feel the discussion hit on the synthetics a bit but I can not find the discussion... so I'll ask the questions 1 In getting ready for getting the Barth out of storage I generally change the oil and oil filter... After sitting for some time I was wondering should I change to synthetic oil for the engine 2 This year I am also going to change the fluid and filter in the transmission.. what is everyones opion on what I should use there... 3 I am also changing oil and filter in the Generator and am considering changing to synthetic there as well your opions 4 and the last one my bumpers do not shine and I would like them to look better than they do.. Does anyone have a product and proceedure they would share for this project.. I have been to the local places and taken home alot of products none of which I am really happy enough to pass along to anyone else... that said how about a product to clean and wax the body of the beast.. I went thru that process last year and it looks pretty good and I would like to keep it that way.. All suggestions are appreciated.. Thanks again for your help... John ------------------ John Reilly Big Times Kennel Centerville Ohio If you see this... You found me | ||
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2/16 Captain Doom |
If there's rust on the bumper, Lime-Away, vinegar, lemon juice, or a rust-treatment product will dispose of that...rinse throughly. I use Nu-Finish on my car and van - it holds up better than anything alse in FL that I've tried. Once a year is enough. I may try one of the Teflon-based products on the coach - expensive, but they seem to work even better. ------------------ Rusty StaRV II, '94 28' Breakaway, 6.5L TD 2 Not-spoiled Golden Retrievers. | |||
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12/07 |
Bill and Rusty like always you guys came thru... Bill Yes that is the conversation I was looking for...I put in Oil got nothing synthtic and got nothing and then fiddled around with a few combos...Anyway thanks for the help Rusty Nu-Finish is what I used last year and was fairly happy with it... If it hold up to your heat etc in Fla I'll go with it again this year... I'll play with the bumper suggestions.. Thanks again for your help.... John ------------------ John Reilly Big Times Kennel Centerville Ohio If you see this... You found me | |||
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I had the bumpers off my '77 last summer, set them up on sawhorses, and wet sanded with the garden hose on them with 1500 grit paper. Then I dried them off and used never-dull on them. There must be some kind of anodizing on the outer surface because on mine, there is a spot in-line with the battery that looks like some acid was spilled there at one time, and it has gone through into the base aluminum, and in that case I don't think there's much that can be done. They sure never spared any expense on those extruded bumpers though, people always comment on them. | ||||
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12/12 |
John, Regarding your bumpers...... Because of the aluminum type, density & extruding process, the bumpers will never achieve the shine possible on the skin. But with a little patience & elbow grease, they can be made good-as-new and quite presentable......... My unit came with bumpers that were straight, but full of scratches & other campground rash, pock marks from stone & gravel and discoloration & rust staining at the mounting bolts from galvanic reaction between the cad-plated bolts & the aluminum...not an attractive addition. Here was my fix: 1. Start with a 3M rubber sanding block and 3M Wetordry polishing paper -30 micron (green). 2.Clean the surface first, then lube with WD-40. With moderate pressure, sand HORIZONTALLY with the grain (never sand across the grain of the aluminum, i.e.: top-to-bottom!) Concentrate extra passes at the faults, until they have "almost" disappeared. 3. Wipe down with clean rag to remove contaminents, otherwise, the residue will contribute to further scratching. 4. Re-lube with WD-40 and repeat the process with 3M Wetordry, 15 micron (gray). Proceed again as in #2 &3 above. 5. The same ritual, using 9 micron (blue), and finally 3 micron (pink)should give you a dull shine with a flawless surface. 6. A final treatment with an aluminum paste polisher (I prefer Nuvite, but Mothers, etc. should all work) will give you an attractive luster. In my case, I remounted bumpers with stainless bolts, including stainless fender washers, backed-up with the same size rubber washers underneath. This effectively isolated the dissimilar materials enough to prevent further rust staining on the bumper surface. My end-result can be seen at: http://www.frappr.com/?a=viewphoto&id=456632&pid=1214824 ....Not perfect, but good enough for who it's for...... | |||
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2/16 Captain Doom |
Met-all is the product that the Air Force used to recommend - Never-Dull was NOT approved, but I can't recall why. ------------------ Rusty StaRV II, '94 28' Breakaway, 6.5L TD 2 Not-spoiled Golden Retrievers. | |||
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12/12 |
Don't know 'bout the whole USAF, but Nuvite is the choice at the Air Force One hangar...good-n-nuff recommendation for me.... | |||
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