The salt/brine is a REAL big "problem" here in Wisconsin. Last year the county road crews used a beet-sugar processing by-product to work with the salt in an attempt to melt the snow and ice at lower temperatures (10°F to -15°F) which is suppose to be much less corrosive that the calcuim chloride used previously. Unfortunately it's about twice the cost of calcuim chloride, so it was dropped.
If you drive your car in the upper Midwest all year long, it WILL rust due to the use of road salt. Unless you are willing to wash the under-carrage and wheel wells on a daily basis and dry it in a heated garage, your car will notice the rust on the wheel well lips in about 5 years. Todays cars are much better because of factory-applied rust-proofing and anti-corrosion coatings applied to sheet metals used on car bodies, but it doesn't last forever.
The heated garage is another issue. It's nice to have, but it does accelerate the corrosion process. Here in Green Bay, WI, it's against a city ordinance to have a garage drain connected to the municipal water-and-sewer treatment system because of oil-and-gas runoff from your car. This is just not logical because that same runoff from the thousands of cars on the streets ends up in the runoff from the rain and snow going into the curbs, which is treated in the municipal water treatment system anyway. Go figure!! That makes it kind of "challenging" to wash a car in a heated garage, which is one reason why many garages are not heated around here.
If you drive your car in the upper Midwest all year long, it WILL rust due to the use of road salt. Unless you are willing to wash the under-carrage and wheel wells on a daily basis and dry it in a heated garage, your car will notice the rust on the wheel well lips in about 5 years. Todays cars are much better because of factory-applied rust-proofing and anti-corrosion coatings applied to sheet metals used on car bodies, but it doesn't last forever.
The heated garage is another issue. It's nice to have, but it does accelerate the corrosion process. Here in Green Bay, WI, it's against a city ordinance to have a garage drain connected to the municipal water-and-sewer treatment system because of oil-and-gas runoff from your car. This is just not logical because that same runoff from the thousands of cars on the streets ends up in the runoff from the rain and snow going into the curbs, which is treated in the municipal water treatment system anyway. Go figure!! That makes it kind of "challenging" to wash a car in a heated garage, which is one reason why many garages are not heated around here.