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Okay, we live in an area that uses a lot of salt on the roads. I watch the TouTube videos of guys down south that can loosen their suspension bolts with a three fingers on a 6-inch long wrench. I’ve done the same, removing exhaust bolts on a ex-Texas car with no problems at all. In any real Minnesota Car, removing ANY bolt underneath usually requires a breaker-bar, impact wrench, sprays, heat, or cutting or grinding off the bolt. Just yesterday on our 15yr old Odyssey van, I had to grind off the bolts going through several suspension bushings as the bolts were firmly rusted into the bushings. A breaker bar got the bolt to turn, but it also broke loose the inner bushing liner from the rubber, making the bolt impossible to turn separately from the liner. So I had to grind and then SawzAll the bolts out. A real pain.
Which makes me think, would it be a good idea to, when the car is only a few years old, to spend a day removing one bolt at a time and anti-seizing the heck out of them? What is a really good anti-seize compound?
Thanks,
George
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