So rusting like any other chemical reaction is temperature dependent. So not much rusting happens in the cold winter unless stored in heated garage. So when it gets warm and the salt is there from the winter, the rusting begins.
If you spray with FF or CarWell in the spring, it pretty much coats all the areas where rust is likely and the salt is not an issue. It either gets blown off during the cleaning prior to spraying CarWell or the salt is dealt with by the spraying of CarWell.
By winter not much of the product is left because it got washed off but it does not matter because the rust will not happen in the cold winter and the vehicle will get treated again in the spring with FF or CarWell.
CarWell company suggests doing the treatment in the spring.
I think there are holes in my story, why shouldn't a good rinsing of the undercarriage do almost as well as a treatment like CarWell or FF??
I would like a thicker product to spray on the undercarriage, but the normal CarWell product in body cavities.
I would feel much better if most of the treatment was still there the next spring
If you spray with FF or CarWell in the spring, it pretty much coats all the areas where rust is likely and the salt is not an issue. It either gets blown off during the cleaning prior to spraying CarWell or the salt is dealt with by the spraying of CarWell.
By winter not much of the product is left because it got washed off but it does not matter because the rust will not happen in the cold winter and the vehicle will get treated again in the spring with FF or CarWell.
CarWell company suggests doing the treatment in the spring.
I think there are holes in my story, why shouldn't a good rinsing of the undercarriage do almost as well as a treatment like CarWell or FF??
I would like a thicker product to spray on the undercarriage, but the normal CarWell product in body cavities.
I would feel much better if most of the treatment was still there the next spring