Yes. It actually rusts faster in water, because water is made one third out of oxygen, which you need to make rust.
Saltwater rusts vehicles even faster than freshwater does. Cars near the coast get more rust than cars in inland parts of the country.
saltwater
In saltwater. In saltwater.
Salt water.
Yes they do, the chemicals from the air find a little crack in the paint and then rust causing bubles. :) Hope this helps :) :) :)
Because salt is a corrosive chemical.
Rust is an iron oxide, Fe2O3.
rust is the result of a combination of moist conditions and oxygen,
Iron will rust more quickly in salt water than fresh freshwater. The salt in the water accelerates the corrosion process.
Palladium does not rust. In the narrowest definition, only iron and its alloys rust, but palladium at most under normal conditions might form a thin, protective surface layer that almost no one would call rust.
rust or oxidation can form on almost any metal surface
Because the ion chloride (Cl-) from salt is very corrosive.
dirt