Head-to-Head Comparison
Head-to-Head Comparison

Under Gone™ vs 3M Rubberized Undercoating
Why Hard Coatings Trap the Problem

3M’s rubberized aerosol cures into a rigid shell — and if any moisture, salt, or rust is underneath it when you spray, the corrosion keeps spreading beneath the coating where you can’t see it. Under Gone™ never hardens, converts rust on contact, and bonds chemically to metal. Here’s the comparison.

Under Gone™ vs 3M Rubberized — Feature Comparison

Rubberized aerosols are the cheapest undercoat option on the shelf. That convenience comes with real trade-offs when it comes to long-term rust protection. Here’s how they compare on the criteria that matter.

Category
Under Gone™
3M Rubberized
Active Chemistry
Calcium sulfonate + rust converter
Rubberized asphalt / polymer
Converts Existing Rust
Cures Hard
Flexes With Substrate
Self-Heals Minor Chips & Scuffs
Traps Moisture If Rust Is Present
Penetrates Seams & Cavities
Will Peel or Crack Over Time
Surface Prep Required
Minimal
Extensive (must be clean & dry)
Application Methods
Undercoat gun, sprayer, brush
Aerosol can only
Available Sizes
1 gal / 5 gal / 55 gal
~16 oz aerosol
Cost Per Vehicle Coverage
Low (bulk pricing)
High (multiple cans needed)

Under Gone™ vs 3M Rubberized — Why Hard Coatings Fail Over Time

The Rubberized Undercoating Problem

Walk into any auto parts store and you’ll see a wall of rubberized undercoating aerosols — 3M, Rust-Oleum, Dupli-Color, POR-15’s version, and a dozen private-label options. They’re cheap, they’re convenient, and they look professional when they cure into a black rubber-like shell on an undercarriage. They are also, for most applications, the wrong tool for the job. The issue isn’t marketing — it’s chemistry and physics.

Rubberized undercoatings are topical barrier coatings. They form a thick, opaque shell that sits on top of the metal. When applied to a perfectly clean, perfectly dry, rust-free substrate and never disturbed, they can provide reasonable short-term protection. The problem is that real-world undercarriages are almost never perfectly clean, perfectly dry, or rust-free — and rubberized coatings are extremely unforgiving of any contamination trapped beneath them.

The Moisture Trap

When rubberized coating is sprayed over a surface that has any residual moisture, salt, or surface rust, it seals those contaminants against the metal. The hard shell creates an oxygen-poor microenvironment underneath it, but the residual water, chlorides, and active iron oxide are still there — and corrosion continues beneath the coating. Because the rubberized shell is visually opaque, you can’t see the damage progressing. By the time the coating begins to lift, blister, or crack, the metal underneath is often significantly worse than it was before the coating was applied.

This is the core argument against rubberized coatings for daily drivers, older vehicles, fleet trucks, and anything that sees real winter weather. They create a situation where not applying any coating would have been the safer choice. The owner thinks the vehicle is protected; the rust says otherwise.

Under Gone™ solves this problem in two ways. First, its rust converter chemically reacts with any iron oxide on the metal surface, transforming active rust into a stable, inert compound before the protective film sets up. Second, Under Gone™ never fully hardens. It remains a flexible, greasy, hydrophobic film that physically displaces moisture from the metal surface instead of sealing moisture in. If water or road brine makes its way behind the film at a seam or edge, the film itself repels the water rather than trapping it.

Flex, Cracks, and the Reality of Vehicle Substrates

Vehicle frames and panels flex constantly. Road impacts, suspension loads, thermal expansion, weight transfer under braking — all of these put cyclical stress on the metal beneath any undercoating. A rigid rubberized coating flexes with the metal up to a point, then begins to micro-crack. Those hairline cracks are not always visible to the naked eye, but they are highways for water and dissolved chlorides to reach the substrate underneath.

Under Gone™’s calcium sulfonate film is intrinsically flexible. It does not crack under substrate flex because it doesn’t cure into a rigid state in the first place. It maintains full-coverage protection through thermal cycling, vibration, and mechanical stress that would compromise a hardened coating. Minor mechanical damage — a stone chip, a scrape from loading debris, brake dust scouring — self-heals because the surrounding film re-flows slightly to cover the disturbed area.

Coverage and Cost Reality

Rubberized aerosols look cheap on the shelf. A can is usually priced at around $10, and it seems like a bargain compared to professional undercoating. But aerosols cover very little surface area. A single can typically treats roughly one wheel well or one small section of frame rail. Coating an entire truck or SUV undercarriage — frame, floor pans, inner fenders, wheel wells, exhaust tunnel — commonly requires 6 to 12 cans. That’s $60–$120 of aerosol product for a single application, applied inefficiently, with significant overspray waste and no ability to tailor the coating thickness where it matters most.

Under Gone™ is sold in 1-gallon, 5-gallon, and 55-gallon containers specifically because professional undercoat jobs and serious DIY applications require real volume. A gallon of Under Gone™ is enough to fully coat most undercarriages with proper coverage for the high-risk zones. The per-vehicle cost is lower than equivalent aerosol coverage, the application is more controlled through a dedicated undercoat gun, and the product can be reapplied annually to high-wear areas without buying a new bulk inventory each time.

When a Rubberized Coating Still Makes Sense

We’ll be honest: rubberized aerosols do have legitimate use cases. If you’re spot-treating a small section of bare metal on a show car that lives in a climate-controlled garage and never sees winter weather, a rubberized can is a reasonable choice. If you’re adding extra sound deadening on top of an existing undercoat, rubberized aerosol is cheap and looks clean. But for daily-driven vehicles, winter drivers, fleet trucks, off-roaders, trailers, farm equipment, and anything with existing surface rust, a rigid shell coating is the wrong philosophy. You need a product that converts rust, bonds chemically to the metal, and stays flexible through years of real-world abuse. That’s what Under Gone™ is engineered to do.

Under Gone™ vs 3M Rubberized — Why Hard Coatings Fail Over Time

Stop Sealing Rust Inside a Rubber Shell.

Under Gone™ converts existing rust at the chemical level, bonds to metal, and stays flexible for the life of the vehicle. No cracking, no peeling, no hidden corrosion spreading beneath a hard coating. Professional-grade undercoating, real protection, available in 1 gal, 5 gal, and 55 gal.

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What Our Customers Say

Trusted by boaters, drivers, fleet operators, and homeowners across the country.

This is a must have if you live in the rust belt. I use it on my truck and tractor. It's amazing stuff.

As a coastal homeowner, we are finally able to efficiently protect our property from the corrosive environment around us.

I have been using Salts Gone on my boat and jet ski now for 2 years. Best product I have ever used. Way better than the competitors.

We use Salts Gone on our plow trucks after each snow event and are very happy with the results! Clean trucks with no salt residue left behind.

Best salt fighting product on the market. Honest advertisements unlike the competitor.

What a shocking experience! My pickup is not only showing no signs of salt, it is cleaner than it was before!

Under Gone™ vs 3M Rubberized — Common Questions

Answers to the most frequently asked questions about choosing between rubberized aerosol undercoatings and Under Gone™.

Rubberized coatings fail for two related reasons: they trap moisture and they crack. If any water, salt residue, or surface rust is present when the coating is applied, the hardened shell seals those contaminants against the metal and corrosion continues unseen beneath the coating. Over time, the rigid shell also develops micro-cracks from normal vehicle flex, giving water and brine a direct path to the metal. Once a rubberized coating begins to lift or blister, the damage underneath is typically worse than it would have been with no coating at all.
We recommend removing as much of the rubberized coating as practical before applying Under Gone™. Rubberized shells prevent the calcium sulfonate film from bonding to the actual metal substrate, which is where Under Gone™’s protection comes from. If the rubberized coating is intact and well-adhered, you can apply Under Gone™ over the top for additional barrier protection, but the full benefit requires bare or lightly-rusted metal contact.
No. Under Gone™ is specifically engineered to work on lightly-rusted and surface-rusted metal without aggressive prep. Remove loose or flaking rust with a wire brush, rinse the undercarriage with Salts Gone® to remove soluble chlorides, let it dry, and apply. The built-in rust converter handles the chemical side of the prep work that other coatings require you to do mechanically.
No. Under Gone™ never fully hardens — it remains a flexible, greasy calcium sulfonate film that flexes with the metal substrate through thermal cycling, vibration, and mechanical stress. There is nothing rigid to crack. Minor stone chips and scuffs self-heal because the surrounding film re-flows slightly over time to maintain continuous coverage.
Most trucks and SUVs require 6 to 12 aerosol cans for a complete undercarriage coating — frame, floor pans, wheel wells, and inner panels. At typical retail pricing, that’s $60–$120 per application, with significant overspray waste and limited control over film thickness. A single gallon of Under Gone™ covers most undercarriages with better coverage, more efficient application through an undercoat gun, and better long-term performance per dollar.
Yes. Under Gone™ is safe for rubber brake lines, fuel lines, suspension bushings, wire harness connectors, and all rubber and plastic components commonly found on vehicle undercarriages. Mask brake rotors, calipers, exhaust components, and any surface where oil residue is undesirable during application, same as any undercoat product.
Rubberized coatings are usually presented as “one-and-done” protection, but in practice they require removal and reapplication when they begin to lift or crack — which is a major labor commitment. Under Gone™ is designed for annual inspection and touch-ups in high-wear areas like wheel wells and frame rail leading edges. Because the film never hardens, reapplication is simply a matter of spraying over existing coating where it has thinned — no scraping or stripping required.