🛠️ Rust be gone, with Oxy-Gone!
Oxy-Gone is a powerful rust remover and metal treatment that neutralizes existing rust and prepares surfaces for painting. With its advanced formula, it transforms rusty surfaces into inert, paintable areas in just one step, making it an essential tool for any DIY enthusiast or professional.
T**N
Easy to apply/ no heavy fumes. Product works even on heavy rust!
This product is really amazing. Used it on the undercarriage of a 1992 Ford 2500 pickup truck 4x4 that had substantial rust with rust flaking off the frame, tapped frame with hammer to knock off any real lose rust, then power washed at car wash, to remove any dirt and any more rust that would fall off(no grinding or wire brush there was still spots on frame where I could have brushed or power grinder off rust. But whole purpose i bought product was to avoid hours of brushing or power grind, and save time. Man did I.) before applying. I let undercarriage completely dry. Grabbed a standard spray bottle filled it up with product (I didn't dilute but believe it said you could for light rust.) and sprayed on with spray bottle. You could see it go to work instantly!, I sprayed the whole undercarriage it took a gallon to do this and let dry for 48 hours(I drove truck around during 48 hours) it turned what ever rust was on that undercarriage and literally bonded it back to the to the metal making a hard paintable surface. It wasn't smooth, but it wasn't rust anymore either. Paint sticks to it well as it sets as a primer. If you have a used vehicle your thinking of undercoating even if you don't have rust. I would still spray this product on to insure the under coat does not trap rust in. It saved me days of brushing and grinding! Had it all done in one day and painted 48 hours later in one day. It is a fantastic product! Easy to use and apply, and dose what it says even on heavy rust. I would wear protective gear, long sleeve shirt you can throw away, eye/face, and hand protection protection. It does sting a little if you get on skin or in eyes, but not extremely. It has almost no smell or fumes, and is water based so it rinsed right of my skin. I would definitely purchase again . I gave five Stars, because of ease of use and application, and dose do what it says it does even on thick rust. Over all good product.
D**N
Easy to use
Excellent product, did exactly what it said it does, I had a heavily rusted bridge support I scraped off the loose rust and wire brushed everything and used a spray bottle to apply worked wonders
J**C
Easy to apply, does a nice job of sealing the rust and providing a nice paintable surface
I just used this on a restoration project, cleaned off the flakey rust with a wire wheel and then brushed this product on. After sitting overnight I had a nicely sealed surface to scuff and paint over. I can not speak to the longevity of the sealing properties as I just completed this repair.
U**D
Need a leak proof container.
It works great. After 12 months the plastic container developed a small leak & caused a lot of damage to goods & an epoxy floor. The product was kept in a conditioned space. It only leaked for a couple of hours when it was discovered.
D**.
Not a replacement for WD-40, but does indeed removes rust.
I'm not entirely satisfied with this product, but it does remove rust as it claims so I can't fault the product too much in that regard. It just isn't very general purpose or novice-friendly it seems. And it doesn't seem to be exactly like Ospho, which it claims similarity to. The color of the liquid is very close though.Oxygone certainly removes the rust, but Oxygone does not work well when wiped onto a surface. It leaves a hard, cruddy foam -- as if it had or were some kind of waxy soap -- that is more troublesome to physically remove than the actual rust. This foam dries sticky and will glue the object in place. It's not overly hard but if you are drying it outside, then stones, grass and dirt alike will glue themselves to the object and become difficult to very difficult to remove. The stains this leaves in untreated brick I have not been able to remove, so beware.Oxygone leaves the same rather nasty, stained, white blotched surface all over the final grey or black finish when applied to iron as well. Even when objects are immersed totally and come out with an nice, pretty and even surface finish, the treated iron seems to react chemically with either the humidity or the air itself and leave these white blotches. I can't emphasize enough how unsightly the staining is. It's similar efflorescence in concrete.Worse, brushed onto a round surface the solution drips and hardens in place, leaving a nasty, crusty residue that is tedious and difficult to remove. No amount of manual wire brushing seems to remove the drip marks entirely and the surface doesn't really get back to the original predrip state, though most of the crust does come off.I cannot recommend Oxygone at all as a rust remover for moving parts. The grey steel it leaves seems to be some sort of bonded sediment as it leaves an unsmooth, pebbly surface and some of the mechanical parts that I have immersed into the Oxygone solution have totally seized up and stopped working. Mind you the tools I soaked in it only had slight surface rust and still worked mostly fine. Applying WD-40 and similar products doesn't seem to fix the build-up problem as it does when they are seized up with rust so buyer beware. If you have rusty mechanical parts this can actually make the problem worse. I tried to apply it to a chrome plated barbell as well as a brass colored household lock on the backyard gate and it seems to have leached out some coppery green substance from both of these. The lock I don't know if it still works. Both the lock and the chrome barbell looks worse than before they started though.Oxygone appears to have absolutely no rust protective or preventative properties to it at all. It does say it is primarily intended as a surface prep for painting, but it bills itself as an Ospho alternative, and I have heard of guys using Ospho to protect iron from rusting, so I don't know if there is something very different in the formulas, or if I simply misunderstood something along the way. Regardless, objects treated with Oxygone also rust again very quickly. This varies on the quality of steel I think. A machete I treated is already rusting over again after a handful of days but my other hand tools are holding up a little bit better.Oxygone also has a certain smell to it. Like rotting eggs. It's actually not too bad in my opinion -- it's relatively faint -- but you probably shouldn't keep an open container of the stuff in the garage or house. I had a 5 gallon bucket of Oxygone (just 1 gallon of liquid though) filled with tools reposing in it on the back patio and my family member complained bitterly about it. I still don't think it was that bad but regardless, this product isn't exactly rose water. Eggy-farts are the words that come to mind. Though I'm glad that it wasn't immediately nauseating like turpentine or some house-paints, or many other chemicals. I didn't feel that the vapors were immediately going to kill me, but that was using it outdoors so do still have some caution using it in confined spaces. The label says the vapors can be harmful but I think that mostly applies to spraying the stuff. This stuff itches and burns on skin contact -- at least after a while anyway -- and getting it in your eye or breathing in the droplets would probably be excruciatingly painful. I wore safety glasses using this stuff but it doesn't really seem to splash as much as I expected.Oxygone definitely burns through nitrile gloves. I wore through several pairs of the gloves, working with this stuff. Not that it burned actual visible holes into them, but it does seem to burn pores into the material and left me with a kind of burning itching sensation. It went away after a while but do be aware of that. About 15 minutes the gloves last and they can't be reused when dry. The blue gloves nitrile gloves I used turned greenish, and when I tried to use them a second time the next day the pores were still open and the Oxygone seeped right through them. I don't know how resistant other types of plastic gloves are but nitrile are a poor choice for working with Oxygone.Overall, this is not an especially convenient rust remover.Oxygone seems to work best if you can immerse the rusty object in the green liquid and let it repose there for a few hours. The liquid does noticeably evaporate over time, so if the object is very rusty you should knock of most of the loose surface rust so you aren't wasting liquid. Covering the container and keeping it out of the sun seems to help. When you remove the rusty object it will have a light black surface sediment that needs to be wiped off. After that you should be left with grey steel. But some steels do seem to change to black underneath though. A barbell and a sledgehammer that I happen to own both came out totally black and not grey. Everything else, including the other hammers I own did turn grey though.For simple hand-tools Oxygone works beautifully. I left some hammers to sit in the solution and they all came out great. This product doesn't really seem to attack or discolor wood or common polymer tool handles, plastic buckets, or kitchen containers at all. It does lift certain kinds of paint though. It dissolved the black surface finish on some cheap barbell plates I had and lifted the colored paint on some smaller steel olympic-style barbell plates that I have.Overall I feel I learned a lot using Oxygone. Mostly that it sucks as a general purpose rust converter, but when used for its intended purpose as a surface primer for painting it works well enough so long as you can completely immerse the object in the Ospho solution, don't try using it on any mechanical surfaces, and paint the object quickly after wiping it down. I feel that it is fairly labor intensive to use when wiped on, having to baby the object, and do several passes of wiping and waiting and wire-brushing to get a satisfactory finish if you don't knock of the worst of the surface rust first. But it does work for what it claims to do, just be warned and don't try to use it outside of its specific intended purpose.I'm not in any hurry to buy another gallon. But if you intend to use for its as-labelled purpose then it does indeed work as intended.
B**A
The stuff works great.
Used it on a rusty shed roof it sealed the rust and I was able to paint the roof.
B**B
Eats up rust
Works great
K**S
Superior Product
This product performed as advertised. Highly recommend using a respirator.
Trustpilot
3 days ago
3 weeks ago