FL is low, warm, wet, and salty.
AZ is high, dry, cool, and clear.
A car in Florida may rust quicker than a car in Arizona due to higher levels of humidity and salt in the air. Florida's proximity to the ocean and its tropical climate result in moist conditions that accelerate the corrosion process. In contrast, Arizona's dry climate and lack of coastal exposure make it less prone to rusting.
It will rust faster in a salt water base and it will also rust faster in a tap water base not a sugary or a pop type, they have a slower fashion of rusting.
Salty air, high ratio of moisture and relatively low temperature causes iron to rust quicker.
The pressure sandblaster will be quicker, but I'm not sure if the siphon sandblaster will blast the rust off the metal as proficiently as the pressure blaster. It would likely not clean the metal as well.
Bleach or chlorox bleach will help cause rust. Vinegar can also help cause rust. If you combine both it rust even quicker. Vinegar is also said to also be a cleaning agent for rust. It will be fun for you to do an experiment to verify both theories.
if rust is forming on a wheelbarrow, it is already magnetic. Rust is Iron Oxide, and a wheelbarrow must be made of iron if there is rust on it. Iron is always magnetic, so an iron wheelbarrow would be magnetic regardless of whether it had no rust or lots of rust on it.
water
Expose it to salt
Copper doesn't rust
Salt Water Because They Rust In Normal Water Too!
soda soda
It will rust faster in a salt water base and it will also rust faster in a tap water base not a sugary or a pop type, they have a slower fashion of rusting.
If it is not coated, it is exposed to the air (or whatever) and will rust.
I dont think it matters but my guess would be Florida because of the humidity. But honestly i dont think it really matters.
salty water would make and object rust quicker than cold water :)
Some cars rust faster than others. It depends on the technology used in the making of the cars. There are old cars who rust very slowly and new cars who rust very quickly.
Salty air, high ratio of moisture and relatively low temperature causes iron to rust quicker.
The pressure sandblaster will be quicker, but I'm not sure if the siphon sandblaster will blast the rust off the metal as proficiently as the pressure blaster. It would likely not clean the metal as well.