Hi all, need some info from experience/knowledge,
From my point of view, sandblast is the best way to get paint to stick to steel.
For regular jobs, we usually wipe the steel with rags and thinner to get rid of oïl/dirt.
For non-dippable pièces, is there a better way to prep steel?
I tried some form of acid, spray on steel, then rinse with hose, but its a PITA for big pièces.
thanks
Richard
getting paint to stick
- tnbndr
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Re: getting paint to stick
A good cleaning with lacquer thinner or acetone, metal primer (Rustoleum for Rusty Metal) and topcoat. There also is a primer that is an adhesion promotor you could use if you are having issues.
I use the Rusty metal primer even for clean metal,figuring it can't hurt.
I use the Rusty metal primer even for clean metal,figuring it can't hurt.
Dennis
LDR 4x8, Scribe, DTHCIV
Hypertherm PM45, Macair Dryer
DeVilbiss Air America 6.5HP, 80Gal., 175psi, Two Stage
16.9scfm@100psi, 16.0scfm@175psi
Miller 215 MultiMatic
RW 390E Slip Roll (Powered)
AutoCAD, SheetCAM, Mach 3
http://ikescreations.com
LDR 4x8, Scribe, DTHCIV
Hypertherm PM45, Macair Dryer
DeVilbiss Air America 6.5HP, 80Gal., 175psi, Two Stage
16.9scfm@100psi, 16.0scfm@175psi
Miller 215 MultiMatic
RW 390E Slip Roll (Powered)
AutoCAD, SheetCAM, Mach 3
http://ikescreations.com
-
- 4 Star Elite Contributing Member
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- Joined: Mon Dec 26, 2011 8:37 pm
- Location: Southeast Missouri
Re: getting paint to stick
Dupont and Duplicolor have a metal etching primer that seems to work good. I know that some body shops use the Dupont for touch up at times. It's expensive but goes a long way. Duplicolor is not as pricey but also doesn't go as far as the Dupont.
Allen
Allen