Powder Coating Chassis with Electrostatic Magic
Powder Coating Chassis with Electrostatic Magic
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Discussion

Fat Arnie

Original Poster:

1,668 posts

287 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Hi, I've made some modes to the chassis of my car. Most of the chasssis is 16g 40mm² box section with a few bits of 3mm sheet where the bulkheads are. Now its time to powder coat thye modified areas gloss black.


I'm usung a 1300w infra red halogen lamp, and it is not making much impact as it cannot get the chassis warm enough. The powder melts to a dull black half cured finish and won't go much further.

Part of the chassis has GRP bodywork atatched (the center tub) which cannot now be removed, so it can't go in an oven, but I am working at the bulkheads so a good 18" from any GRP.

Does anyone have any ideas for a heat source which will help the powder cure but not melt my GRP bodwork?

A paint stripping heat gun will take ages - I have about 1m² to cover.

Edited by Fat Arnie on Monday 16th November 17:40

singlecoil

35,802 posts

270 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Fat Arnie said:
A paint stripping heat gun will take ages - I have about 1m² to cover.

Have you actually tried one, though? I can't think of any other way of transferring enough heat in a situation like that. A decent heat gun can make a surface very hot indeed, and can be held in one spot unlike heat lamps etc which spread the heat over a bigger area.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

279 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
I've got the same kit and tried several times to get powder coating to stick properly with a hot air gun but it never works. I think the issue is that with a hot air gun you simply melt the powder, but it barely gets the material underneath warm so you get barely any adhesion. I find it all flakes off very quickly (and it was properly degreased in each case).

I suspect that without an oven large enough to stick the chassis into you are very unlikely to get satisfactory results.

Fat Arnie

Original Poster:

1,668 posts

287 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Thats what I am afraid of. EM do not take phone calls, so I ahve emialed them, but no response yet. They state on their website "good results can be achieved using an infrared curing lamp, bar heater or heat gun (if you are not in a rush)"

My chassis is worth £10k and if an infrared curing lamp does not work, they will be paying the cost of the mess their product has created being professionally rectified.

Furyblade_Lee

4,114 posts

248 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Is it not woth trying some really good quality black chassis paint instead? I cannot remember the name off the top of my head (i think it contains a number or two), but I know a lot of kit builders use a special black paint which can be sprayed (anyone?) I personally would not bother home powdercoating, the professionals cock it up enough.

Furyblade_Lee

4,114 posts

248 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
And I think you have two hopes of getting EM to pay for any mess. Paint it.

Russ Bost

456 posts

233 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Can you not use the 1300W lamp & use the hot air gun in addition, I've soldered 22mm copper pipe with a heat gun, just takes a bit of patience. I would agree that getting electromagic to pay for your incorrect use of their product is unlikely to work!

rdodger

1,089 posts

227 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
POR15 brushed on, flatted then spray satin black to protect it from UV.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

279 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
Fat Arnie said:
My chassis is worth £10k and if an infrared curing lamp does not work, they will be paying the cost of the mess their product has created being professionally rectified.
It does work quite well with an infra red lamp when you are poweder coating little brackets etc. which is exactly what this kit is designed for IMO. You just won't get enough heat into a chassis though. Did you ask them if it would be suitable for powder coating an entire chassis when you bought it? It was certainly not advertised as such when I bought mine.

Fat Arnie

Original Poster:

1,668 posts

287 months

Monday 16th November 2009
quotequote all
From thier website FAQ:

How do I cure large components?
This is best done in a large industrial oven, however good results can be achieved using an infrared curing lamp, bar heater or heat gun (if you are not in a rush)

I asked them at the Peterbprpough show this year about a complete chassis, they said yes it would do that fine.

Reality is a 1300w lamp does not get the chassis near 180deg.



Edited by Fat Arnie on Tuesday 17th November 15:24

Furyblade_Lee

4,114 posts

248 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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The problem Arnie is heat soak along the large chassis, I get that when soldering copper pipe. A fitting on 3" of short pipe heats up to melting point a lot quicker than the same fitting on 3m of pipe. I can see how a lamp may work to powdercoat an isolated bracket, but "pissing in the wind" does sum up nicely trying to heat a chassis with a bloody lamp!

Fat Arnie

Original Poster:

1,668 posts

287 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
quotequote all
So why do they claim a chassis can be done with an infra red lamp?

singlecoil

35,802 posts

270 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
quotequote all
Fat Arnie said:
So why do they claim a chassis can be done with an infra red lamp?
Because they are more interested in marketing than accuracy?

andygtt

8,345 posts

288 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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I personally dont like powder coated chasis as even the best stuff flakes off on the underside... Im intending to 2 pack paint mine with proper etch primer etc... more expensive yes, but worth it for an expensive chasis.

gtmdriver

333 posts

197 months

Tuesday 17th November 2009
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I have the same DIY kit and have used it successfully on small brackets for my bike (which is what I bought it for) but I would not hold out much hope on anything which will not fit into my small oven.

The whole component has to be up to curing temperature for 10 minutes to get good adhesion, not just the powder coating.

mkindyblade

136 posts

204 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Furyblade_Lee said:
Is it not woth trying some really good quality black chassis paint instead? I cannot remember the name off the top of my head (i think it contains a number or two), but I know a lot of kit builders use a special black paint which can be sprayed (anyone?) I personally would not bother home powdercoating, the professionals cock it up enough.
+1 for the black chassis paint. The name of the product is POR15. Very strong and very good. Frost's sell it. Not cheap.

Problem with p/coating is that will flake. And then you are lookingh complete strip down to recoat. POR15 is pernament and will not cheep or flake. You can brush it on or for best resolts you need to spray it on. Just dont get it on your hands. 3 weeks plus before comes of your skin.

http://www.frost.co.uk/

Edited by mkindyblade on Wednesday 18th November 07:50

Furyblade_Lee

4,114 posts

248 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
quotequote all
Thats the stuff! I wish my Phoenix was done in that, I swear the day it hit 5 years old all the powdercoating in the engine bay just fell off! Pain in the arse to rectify, done now but given the option now I would sod the cost and spray my own chassis with it at the beginning.

blitzracing

6,419 posts

244 months

Wednesday 18th November 2009
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Quinny said:
andygtt said:
I personally dont like powder coated chasis as even the best stuff flakes off on the underside... Im intending to 2 pack paint mine with proper etch primer etc... more expensive yes, but worth it for an expensive chasis.
This is the approach I'd take..

This chassis had exactly that process about 13 years ago..

Sand blasted
Etch primed
2 pack
laquer
Wax oil

Before steam cleaning last weekfrown





After steam cleaning last weeksmile


On the latter photos, it looks like the silver top coat has come off, and left bare metal (albeit good). I dont see any etch primer as this would not have steam cleaned off, and it looks like the waxoyle is really the hero here to have protected the paint, or are my eyes playing tricks?