CudaChick1968
Member Emeritus
VERY COOL!! PM me with your plans for it. You know I have a kind of special thing for TA's with that phoenix bird on the hood LOL
It was several years ago and he closed his shop quite awhile ago as well. Too bad really. He had a home made oven that was big enough to hold an entire car. In fact he did the complete chassis for my old racecar as well as several vintage Harley & Triumph motorcycle frames. In fact the powder I'm using to teach myself how to do it was some stuff he had left over. Does powder have a shelf life if kept dry ? The black I used recently for my first attempt seemed to work fine and it's all tightly sealed in Mason jars. Here are a few pics of some stuff he did for me back when I was building 60s vintage Triumphs. He did all the frames and all the misc. small parts as well. And yeah, some of the pics were taken inside the house. I was single then.... LoLYour buddy should check out my article on masking if he doesn't mind taking advice from a hobbyist. It should help him with his tape lines.
Powder Coat Masking Pt.2
holy hell.. this stuff is about 5-6 years old but it works and I'm just doing my own stuff. What happens when it goes bad ?It's generally six months as a rule of thumb, but I toss it in the trash if it starts getting chunky and lumpy.
It's almost noon. Get to work !... LoL and thanks. I'm cheap and only doing this for my own junk. I'll take your advice though and ditch any that looks chunky. Most of it seems fine.
That's wonderful news 610! Congrats to your son and to you as well! I hope the side job can fill in where the full time leaves off and wish you many years of continued success.
Now all the boy has to do is get that big boy job and we are set. he better me and momma got a lot of money spent on this degree of his but he is worth every cent we spent.Thanks Leanne that means a lot coming from you. 2 colors I can do was working on 3 on the same part but never mastered it I will tho im sure just a little trial and error as I am sure you know. Hope your business is goin good also.Now all the boy has to do is get that big boy job and we are set. he better me and momma got a lot of money spent on this degree of his but he is worth every cent we spent.
LOL.. Speaking of a Phoenix.. To celebrate the ex leaving I had new name covered up with one. Or I could just pretend I had this done in tribute to my favorite lady powdercoater... How are you my friend ?VERY COOL!! PM me with your plans for it. You know I have a kind of special thing for TA's with that phoenix bird on the hood LOL







The guides great. Thank you for posting it.
Keep working on it and refining it and soon it will draw a ton of traffic. Don't let anybody get you down.
I just found a restaurant warming cabinet that is about 6' tall and 3' square that I was thinking about turning into a powder oven. It currently will warm to 150 and I was hoping to add a large element to the bottom to get it to 400 degrees. It is on wheels, insulated and pretty heavy duty. What do you think??
The guides great. Thank you for posting it.
Keep working on it and refining it and soon it will draw a ton of traffic. Don't let anybody get you down.
x2. I found it very helpful in getting the basics. Thanks for taking the time to collect and write all of the information.
When you hang a workpiece on a hook, how do you ensure that the area it is being hung from get's coated?
Screwing a spare bolt into a hole you're trying to keep free of powder works fine ... until you cure it. Then you have a helluva time trying to remove the cured-in bolt without tearing up the powder surrounding the bolt hole.
Just invest in some high temp silicone plugs instead. If need be, you can poke your wire right through one of them and hang up the part without worry ... or spending an hour trying to get your cured bolt back.![]()
The guides great. Thank you for posting it.
Keep working on it and refining it and soon it will draw a ton of traffic. Don't let anybody get you down.




