Hi all,
I've got an interesting rust problem on the edges of the doors of my '03 Mazda Protege. It has progressed slowly over time to the point where I can't ignore it anymore. The worst is the driver door, but the rear driver's side is also bad. The passenger side, oddly enough, is barely rusty. The problems are mostly on the lower corners on the inside, and extend the length of the inner door channel under the door panel. Behold:
This one is the worst, and it appears the rust is beginning to get scaly (not to mention bubbly as I look at it-ick).
The rust extends under the door panel in the little channel you see:
The rear driver side door- not quite as bad:
Here are the products I have to deal with this:
I had planned on knocking some of it off with a wire brush and going at it with the Mar-Hyde, then the Rust Encapsulator, then the factory touch up paint-in-a-bottle (that isn't pictured), but I think RE needs rust to bond to. So is a better route to just sand down and knock off the bubbling, then Rust Encapsulator, then paint? Want to get ahead of this as I need to ship out again with the Army (I'm on some leave from overseas and I saw this and can't ignore it).
Thanks for any advice that may help!
I've got an interesting rust problem on the edges of the doors of my '03 Mazda Protege. It has progressed slowly over time to the point where I can't ignore it anymore. The worst is the driver door, but the rear driver's side is also bad. The passenger side, oddly enough, is barely rusty. The problems are mostly on the lower corners on the inside, and extend the length of the inner door channel under the door panel. Behold:
This one is the worst, and it appears the rust is beginning to get scaly (not to mention bubbly as I look at it-ick).

The rust extends under the door panel in the little channel you see:



The rear driver side door- not quite as bad:

Here are the products I have to deal with this:

I had planned on knocking some of it off with a wire brush and going at it with the Mar-Hyde, then the Rust Encapsulator, then the factory touch up paint-in-a-bottle (that isn't pictured), but I think RE needs rust to bond to. So is a better route to just sand down and knock off the bubbling, then Rust Encapsulator, then paint? Want to get ahead of this as I need to ship out again with the Army (I'm on some leave from overseas and I saw this and can't ignore it).
Thanks for any advice that may help!