I haven’t showed you guys this yet,
but I have been powder-coating everything that fits in my garage oven for about
25 years or so. Yeah, unlike normal
people, I have a yard-sale oven mounted on the wall in the garage, just above
the air-compressor, next to the bead blast cabinet. Normal garage accoutrements.
What? You don't have an oven in your garage? |
Today we’re coating the headlight
buckets because I have new hardware for them from Sunbeam Specialties and
because I wanna. I also have the rear
leaf spring shackles and a steering box mount that just happen to be ready and need
to be black too. We’re applying Eastwood
Company’s powder coat primer and Mirror Black color coat.
Step One, Cleanage: Powder-coated parts must be clean, surgically
clean if you can get it. Any dirt, old
paint, rust etc. will bubble the powder-coat or prevent the powder from
sticking. Glass bead blasting makes
things VERY clean. It calms the obsessive
restorer’s nerves. After blastage, wipe
everything down with lacquer thinner, and we’re ready.
(Short Technical Blurblet: The powder in powder-coating is exactly that,
a dry powder. You stick it to the metal with
electricity. Attach the powder-coat gun’s
ground wire to the victim and charge it with negative electro-bugs. The powder-coating gun’s barrel charges the
powder dustlets with positive electro-bugs, the negative electro-bugs attract
the positive electro-bugs and Bob’s Your Uncle, a perfectly even coat of powder. That’s why you can only powder-coat stuff
that conducts electricity. Also, since
you slap it in the oven at 425-degree heat for about 20 minutes, the victim must
be able to take the heat too. Plastic,
rubber, and such truck are out, sorry to say.)
The Victims - headlight buckets all cleaned and ready |
Step Two, Primer: You don’t always need to apply primer, in
fact this is the first time I have applied primer, but it helps, and I’ll prime
things regularly now. BTW, it’s a powder
primer. It’s applied just like any other
powder.
Sometimes imperfections in the
metal, like ground in grease from sixty years on an old Sunbeam Alpine imbeds
stuff in the metal that bead-blasting and lacquer thinner just don’t touch. I have had powder refuse to adhere to
spots for no apparent reason in the past. The
primer helps prevent that, and it gives you a chance the fix problems between the primer coat and color coat.
Primed! They needed a bit of sanding before the color coat |
Step Three, Perfect Color Baby: Powder-coat is like the most awesome paint
ever! The shine is perfect – Eastwood’s Mirror
Black is THE shiniest. No drips or runs,
just the smoothiest, most evenest coverage.
And it’s damn nearly
indestructible! You’ll learn how indestructible
if you ever try to sand the stuff off.
It shines through gas leaks, brake fluid, thinners. It doesn’t chip; it’s really hard to scratch,
it even takes blows from dropped wrenches and whatnot. Consider it permanent paint. (If you change your mind about the color, you
can paint over it, or re-powder-coat it, but that can be problematic.)
BLACK! It's hard to get a pic of just how awesome the shine is |
Assembled with new hardware from Sunbeam Specialties I love restoring stuff! |
2 comments:
Don't worry the photos do your baking justice the parts look amazing, perfacet for all the small stuff thanks again as always cheers Andy
Andy!
I'm doing lots of "littles" these days getting ready to paint the undercarriage. Rootes painted the undercarriage red oxide so I'm going to do the same. Most of the time, they sprayed a quasi-effective undercoating over the red oxide. I won't do that, but I will top coat the red oxide with an egg shell clear coat.
More to come!
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