Submitted by nebula828 t3_10muers in askscience
PlaidBastard t1_j68wnji wrote
Reply to comment by it00 in Why does road salt accelerate corrosion in a vehicle's underbody? by nebula828
Puget Sound in WA state is a good exception to this, because the water is less salty and probably because the constant rain keeps the air from getting brackish.
Seriously, cars don't rust here. Sunroofs leak and mildew destroys them from the inside, but the green algae usually scrubs right off to reveal shiny clearcoat....
Then you go 50 miles west to the actual Pacific coast, and everything you say about rust is true again...
it00 t1_j68yx3y wrote
I took a ferry near Puget Sound on a road trip in 2018 - from Clinton to Mukilteo - is it Possession Sound? Genuinely just thought it was a regular sea crossing - I suppose looking again at the map that area is more like a river than a regular seaway.
The rain held off for the most part - although the greenery was spectacular compared to the other (?rain shadow) side of the Cascades. Lovely part of the world. Good you don't get the rust problem - same here in Scotland. In the sea lochs it isn't a problem - on the coast and islands on the other hand...... it's hellish!
[deleted] t1_j68zh70 wrote
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