Theres multiple types of undercoating, each with their own lifespans and pros/cons. I'd reach out to a shop that offers it and ask what the best option would be for your use case.I’ve heard of a local shop offering an oil base undercoating? Anyone recommend this? I do off roading about twice a year in my 2020 Gladiator and live in Ohio. Just wasnt sure of the oil base. I’ve been told it only lasts 1 yr?
I’ve used it with rattle cans, how’d it go on with an airless sprayer? Never thought of thatBlaster Surface Shield gets my vote, but that is usually a self application process as not too many shops spray it commercially.
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Works great. Just use the heavy latex nozzles.I’ve used it with rattle cans, how’d it go on with an airless sprayer? Never thought of that
Highly recommend Woolwax. After 3 years my wife's Wrangler looks great in OH weather.Theres multiple types of undercoating, each with their own lifespans and pros/cons. I'd reach out to a shop that offers it and ask what the best option would be for your use case.
Just some points from the shop I go through:
Woolwax
- Annual Application
- Great for new or used vehicles
- Can be sprayed over rust (and will slow future spreading)
- Contains penetrants that soak into the pores of the metal
- Not suitable for underbody wash or power washer.
Dinitrol
- 3-5 years of protection (Depends on vehicle use)
- Great for new vehicles (or rust free)
- Dries to a non-tacky surface, but remains flexible
- Able to be washed with underbody wash and/or power washer.
Waxoyl
- HIGHEST LEVEL OF PROTECTION
- Lifetime of protection*
- Great for new or used vehicles
- Dries to a soft waxy surface
- Able to be washed with underbody wash and/or power washer.
- Moisture displacing
- Contains penetrants that soak into the pores of the metal
- Highway use and Off-road
I know woolwax can get messy. It wasn't recommended since the truck would see water crossings, mud, etc., and would "stain" from dirt roads and such.
I had Dinitrol done on my Tacoma. It dried "hard", but would come off sticky if you were working on things that were coated with it. It looked just fine after a couple rounds of Utah.
Haven't used Waxoyl so I can't speak for that.
I'm in Minnesota and have been considering Woolwax. MNDOT does use a lot of salt. Did you use rattle cans or a sprayer? I appreciate your insight.I was looking at this when I bought my JT in 2024. I wanted something I could DIY. Fluid Film has good reviews, but is supposedly a little runny and a bit smelly. I went with Woolwax, and bought a nice sprayer. This would actually be kind of fun if I had a lift, but not quite as fun on jack stands.
It does stay fluid, so picks up road dust, but on the bottom I don't really care. Minimal odor and it's not a bad smell. I was really impressed how it resisted the huge amount of salt we use here in Minnesota. I did a really thorough job the first year, and more of a touchup on exposed surfaces this year.
If you go with an outside company, I would ask if they plan to drill access holes anywhere. Personally, I would not want access holes.
I also live in Northeast Ohio and I have used fluid film on my last four vehicles. I just sold my 2014 JK and my undercarriage had zero rust at 11 years. It's not that sloppy or messy. Two cans will do a whole vehicle. I do it once a year. Cost me about 25 bucksI’ve heard of a local shop offering an oil base undercoating? Anyone recommend this? I do off roading about twice a year in my 2020 Gladiator and live in Ohio. Just wasnt sure of the oil base. I’ve been told it only lasts 1 yr?
Wow, what a year up here! The first real winter we have had for a while. I am no expert, but I did go with a sprayer. Even without a huge air compressor, it seemed to work fine. I just went slower so the compressor could keep up.I'm in Minnesota and have been considering Woolwax. MNDOT does use a lot of salt. Did you use rattle cans or a sprayer? I appreciate your insight.
I have always lived in MN, and never undercoated a vehicle until my JT. I found out the hard way the difference between trucks and cars/SUVs in our climate. All the cars I drove in the winter, from an AWD 911 to our 100K mile Lexus RX350 are almost fully covered underneath with plastic panels.Not to sound totally off base here, but originally being from New Jersey, I do recall growing up when undercoating was a big deal on cars. Even the dealers offered it before you drove the car off the lot. Always commercials on the TV about undercoating, I remember Ziebart was very visible at that time.
Then, supposedly because different metals were used in making the cars, the places seemed to disappear. I had not heard of undercoating in many. many years until I am reading about it here (yes, I have been in South Florida for 35 years so undercoating here is not something used here). But I still stopped hearing about it even while in NJ.
But I guess, from what I am reading here, that it still exists.
