Prep for powder coating

Started by Crosley.In.AZ, March 12, 2006, 06:15:54 PM

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Crosley.In.AZ

As I understand it , the parts must be clean , blasted?

The blasting media is usually an abrasive that does not leave little bits in the metal?

Is there a preferred blasting media for metal that will be powder coated? Low dust , fine grit?

I am thinking of getting a  powder coat setup and start in on some Crosley suspension parts.


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enjenjo

I blast with Black Beauty if I'm paying for it, aluminum oxide if it's free. not much dust with either.
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Bib_Overalls

For brake backing plates and similar items I also use Black Beauty.  About $10 a bag here.  

For smaller items I glass bead.
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EMSjunkie

I used glass beads on my stuff.
the powder coating dude said it would be fine.
they run their parts thru some kinda wash and preheat before coating.


just my experience.  :wink:


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Jbird

I use glass bead if I want a real fine finish. Sometimes it getsa little dusty if you're blasting rusty parts. I usually wash the parts with Simple Green and a brush or scotch brite, rinse really good then dry right away with compressed air and heat.  Be careful when you start powder coating, some people lose control.

When I do any powder coating I always end up with a layer of overspray powder on my powder coating table. I don't want to throw it away and I'm afraid of contamination if I mix it back with the new powder. So I use a new clean paint brush and sweep the overspray into some extra powder cups. I don't try too hard to segregate the colors so I end up with some real interesting mixtures. My new old truck has six or eight different colors baked onto various components. The cool thing is, every time I do a powder coating job one of my special colors gets enhanced.
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donnie g

i usually wipe the part down with solvent then dry it in the oven @380#
or so to get rid of any trace oils etc in the pores of the metal,and apply the coating with the metal a least at 150 degrees!