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There have been lots of attempts. In the mid-'70s, the method was to drill the POCA- recommended drain holes in the rear rails and the bottoms of external 'horse-shoe' a-arm braces, plug them all and fill the rails to the brim with drain oil! After a few hours of soaking, pull the plugs and drain. Leave ALL the plugs out for driving, too. Other people have uses wands attached to sprayers etc. Only the first method guarantees complete coverage, though. And you don't necesarily need to use drain oil. But you do need the 3/8 or 1/2" drain holes-3 in each rail (6 total) and one in the base of each a-arm horseshoe (4 total).
Ziebart has a good reputation in the anti-rust field, but I'd be VERY careful of foams in the rear subframes. That was a semi-popular 'upgrade' in the early '80s, that turned out to nearly destroy a few cars. The foam used was polyurethane, and like all foams, it shrinks slightly over time. Water then channels around the foam to sit forever underneath it, in contact with the frame bottoms. THe foam prevented it from evaporating..... The affected cars rusted through the bottoms of the subframes, and had to be extensively (and expensively!)rebuilt.
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