Hi Guys,
There is in the market also a electrostatic charged powder coating for foundry moulds, this foundry powder coating is a mixture of refrctory and pwder resin, you aply it with a powder gun adn then bake up to 180 celcius.
I know is not a productfpr Hobbist but is just to let you guy know that posibility for foundry moulds (comercial name is TRIBONOL)
--- El jue 23-jun-11, R.L. Wurdack <dickw@nwlink.com> escribió:
De: R.L. Wurdack <dickw@nwlink.com>
Asunto: Re: [gingery_machines] OT: Powder Coat Paint and equipment
A: gingery_machines@yahoogroups.com
Fecha: jueves, 23 de junio de 2011, 15:39
One thing about powdercoat is extremely important. The powdercotee must be
completely clean to get a durable, lasting finish. In commercial ops this is
often done with various cleaning solutions (depending on the material being
coated) and ultrasonics.
D.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Bradley" <bstogsdill1@yahoo.com>
To: <gingery_machines@yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Wednesday, June 22, 2011 2:09 PM
Subject: [gingery_machines] OT: Powder Coat Paint and equipment
> Greetings:
>
> Anybody ever use the baked on powdered paint? I saw Sears has a Craftsman
> powder coat paint gun for $70 and all you need is electricity to charge
> the paint and an oven that will reach 400F to bake it on.
>
> I think that the baked on powder coat paint would be a great finish for
> most any metal projects. Very durable and nice looking.
>
> Is it as easy as it sounds?
>
> Regards
> Bradley
>
>
>
>
>
>
> ------------------------------------
>
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