AA7483
Well-known member
Got some metal cabinets on Craigslist for my shop and want to paint them. Looking for suggestions on something that will hold up.
Doesnt need to be perfect. Just want it to look decent and not chip every time I touch it. Easy and inexpensive is good too. Id love to just use a rattle can. Any reason not to?
I did not prime it.
I picked up couple cabinets for $5 each, It was a good reason to buy a spray gun and learn how to use it. I picked up the paint at Tractor supply
again. 
I have had really good luck with rustoleum shot through a cheap HF HVLP spray gun.
This is ny old drill press that i shot. That color is the same as electrical pannel boxes and a stocked color at homedepot.
I was getting pretty frustrated with majjic paints. They seemed like it was a very soft paint. Then I painted a hitch and forgot about it. Well I finally remembered that I rattled canned it I re assembled it and threw it into duty. That paint just wouldn't chip.I have probably a half dozen half-used spray cans of Majic implement paint from Tractor Supply here now. I've had miserable luck with using the cans more than once, sometimes twice. Despite my efforts to clean the nozzle after using, they seem to gum up so hard I can't get them to spray again, or if it does, it's an awful drippy flow that's no good anyway.
The implement paint itself is OK. I wouldn't rate it head-and-shoulders above a typical RustOleum, but certainly OK. It tends to be slow drying, which one would like to assume means they dry harder for it.
If you go with implement paint, at least this brand, I'd avoid rattle can and go with roller, as suggested by Marctrees.
Rust-Oleum themselves say:
Air Atomized Spray: Useful for many Rust-Oleum coatings. Thinning to proper viscosity is
important and usually requires 10% to 15% of the appropriate thinner. See product label for
more specific information. Avoid overthinning. Use minimum air pressure necessary for good
atomization. Several passes may be needed to achieve recommended film thickness.
I've used their Professional High Performance Enamel before to good effect. The SDS sheet has this to say about application:
APPLICATION
Mix thoroughly to ensure any settled pigment is redispersed
before using. Thin material, only if necessary,
with acetone. For brush or roller, thinning is not normally
required. For air spray, thin up to 1-½ to 2 pints per gallon.
Do not thin with gasoline, lacquer thinner, turpentine, etc.
For airless spray, thinning is not normally required.
Works out to ~4:1 ratio paint to thinner.
