Heavymetalmechanic
Well-known member
Sorry if this is the wrong area to post this, feel free to move it.
After we finish welding up these great projects we often need to prevent rust with a few coats of paint. After doing a search and chatting with a few friends I have not yet reached a general agreement on the best methods.
Ex: I sandblasted a project on Thursday, blew if off with compressed air and wiped my greasy handprints off with some thinner. Is it ready for paint?
The spray cans are at 15-20*C
I make sure the garage is at least 10*C and try for 15, and I heat the item with a radiant propane heater before and between coats, shutting off the heaters while spraying and airing the space out before turning them back on.
I try to do a light, even coat of primer, just enough so I no longer see bare metal. I use short sweeping sprays, releasing the nozzle each time. After the first coat I aim the heaters at it and let it sit for 45-60 minutes before starting the second coat of primer. I usually only do 2 coats of primer.
I wait 45-60 minutes after the second primer coat before applying paint, using the same procedure.
I have started to notice that some of the projects I have done this way tend to have the paint chip/flake rather then scratch when they are knocked into or have something draged against them. Is this a result of cheap paint/primer or more often caused by the way I apply the paint/primer? Is there such a thing as too much/little primer?
After we finish welding up these great projects we often need to prevent rust with a few coats of paint. After doing a search and chatting with a few friends I have not yet reached a general agreement on the best methods.
Ex: I sandblasted a project on Thursday, blew if off with compressed air and wiped my greasy handprints off with some thinner. Is it ready for paint?
The spray cans are at 15-20*C
I make sure the garage is at least 10*C and try for 15, and I heat the item with a radiant propane heater before and between coats, shutting off the heaters while spraying and airing the space out before turning them back on.
I try to do a light, even coat of primer, just enough so I no longer see bare metal. I use short sweeping sprays, releasing the nozzle each time. After the first coat I aim the heaters at it and let it sit for 45-60 minutes before starting the second coat of primer. I usually only do 2 coats of primer.
I wait 45-60 minutes after the second primer coat before applying paint, using the same procedure.
I have started to notice that some of the projects I have done this way tend to have the paint chip/flake rather then scratch when they are knocked into or have something draged against them. Is this a result of cheap paint/primer or more often caused by the way I apply the paint/primer? Is there such a thing as too much/little primer?
