2011 Tahoe door trim corrosion residue
I have been noticing some corrosion residue dried on the paint from where water drips from the door trim. It seems obvious that something is going on behind the trim, but I wanted to know if anyone has had this issue or heard of it.
I will note that this is not the same 'rust' look on the trim itself that some Tahoe/suburban owners have noted on older models. This is coming from behind the trim.
TIA
I will note that this is not the same 'rust' look on the trim itself that some Tahoe/suburban owners have noted on older models. This is coming from behind the trim.
TIA
Yep, mine has that. And a line of residue under the plastic piece as well... very noticeable on black.
I've tried taking it off with a scrubber, but fear just rubbing off the actual paint.
It looks like GM's continual build process of: 1. Good Idea, 2. Cheap implementation has struck again.
The only thing you could do / try may be some goo gone or goof off, or maybe one of those 3M sticker wheels, because I'm guessing that's the glue holding the trim on, which over the years has degraded and is slowing leaving the vehicle... because... they saved $0.05 on that part.
I'm told these work well, but haven't used on personally:
I've tried taking it off with a scrubber, but fear just rubbing off the actual paint.
It looks like GM's continual build process of: 1. Good Idea, 2. Cheap implementation has struck again.
The only thing you could do / try may be some goo gone or goof off, or maybe one of those 3M sticker wheels, because I'm guessing that's the glue holding the trim on, which over the years has degraded and is slowing leaving the vehicle... because... they saved $0.05 on that part.
I'm told these work well, but haven't used on personally:
Last edited by SabrToothSqrl; May 15, 2015 at 6:53 AM.
I thought about that too. Unfortunately, to me it looks like the white corrosion residue that you see commonly on batteries. The stuff is nearly impossible to get off too. I can get it barely visible, but if you run your hand over it, its certainly still there just waiting to grab more of it when it drains.
It hadn't been rainy or wet for a few days and it was still dripping. Moisture just gets behind those pieces and sits there, which worries me about corrosion behind it. At least the new models don't appear to have a lot of this kind of trim, just molded body panels, so maybe they figured it out somewhere along the line.
It hadn't been rainy or wet for a few days and it was still dripping. Moisture just gets behind those pieces and sits there, which worries me about corrosion behind it. At least the new models don't appear to have a lot of this kind of trim, just molded body panels, so maybe they figured it out somewhere along the line.
I doubt it's adhesive as most if not all trim is attached using 3M VHB Trim tape. I suspect it's dirt residue from car washing that seeps out after drying. I noticed that the soap used at the car wash gets trapped and then seeps out later and if not removed soon, it becomes very hard to remove.
Trending Topics
It looks like GM's continual build process of: 1. Good Idea, 2. Cheap implementation has struck again.
The only thing you could do / try may be some goo gone or goof off, or maybe one of those 3M sticker wheels, because I'm guessing that's the glue holding the trim on, which over the years has degraded and is slowing leaving the vehicle... because... they saved $0.05 on that part.
The only thing you could do / try may be some goo gone or goof off, or maybe one of those 3M sticker wheels, because I'm guessing that's the glue holding the trim on, which over the years has degraded and is slowing leaving the vehicle... because... they saved $0.05 on that part.
I doubt it's adhesive as most if not all trim is attached using 3M VHB Trim tape. I suspect it's dirt residue from car washing that seeps out after drying. I noticed that the soap used at the car wash gets trapped and then seeps out later and if not removed soon, it becomes very hard to remove.
This is actually something I'm very familiar with. My company has a 60,000 sf facility that does nothing but die-cuts and adhesive lamination. We sell primarily to the Tier 1 suppliers. We are also an authorized 3M adhesive distributor.
VHB is the current tape used on just about all exterior applications, from Kia to Mercedes. There is yet to be any viable competitive alternative.
So, to address STS' comments - the way GM (and most other manufacturers, not to single out GM) tries to save that nickel is by pounding on its vendors for cost-downs, and if the vendor doesn't or can't, the vendor is shopped to his competitors. Why do you think Visteon and Delphi have been through multiple bankruptcies, like a revolving door?
Last edited by intheburbs; May 18, 2015 at 7:45 AM.
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post
burnsze15
Tahoe & Suburban
3
Apr 23, 2009 9:54 AM









