paging Steve2000ss ? about zoopseal
<strong>all you do is pour some on your wheels or the polished parts and rinse with water. </strong></font><hr /></blockquote><font size="2" face="Verdana, Helvetica, sans-serif">Well thats sort of a simplification of the process.. lol..
First off its wierd magic stuff.. you get one ounce of part A and two onces of part B. These come in a 3oz bottle so its easy to mix. One Problem, once you mix it you have 5 days to use it. So i mixed smaller portions 1 tablespoon A to 2 tablespoons B. <img border="0" title="" alt="[Smile]" src="gr_stretch.gif" />
You mix them then let them sit till clear (oh, first you have to clean, clean, clean the parts using the supplied cleaner and then rinse in distilled water) Oh, and dry the parts COMPLETELY as water and zoopseal do not mix.
Ok, so parts are clean and dry, now (using the supplied towles) apply zoopseal VERY litely using non-overlapping strokes. let get dry to the touch then apply the zoop "final seal" and buff out.
As stated I just used this stuff so time will tell how it works. It seems to have done something to the parts. I just did the waterpump and it feels different now <img border="0" title="" alt="[Smile]" src="gr_stretch.gif" /> -- Zoopseal is a ceramic based polymer that fills the pores in the metal so O2 cant get in and start oxidation..
I will updates as time goes on..


