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To Prime or Not To Prime? |
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DennisA (IL)
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Ridott IL. Points: 2064 |
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Posted: 26 Nov 2010 at 5:32pm |
I remade a hopper for a potato planter out of stainless. I am getting ready to paint and was wondering if I need to prime it first. What do you recommend?
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Thanks & God Bless
Dennis |
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427435
Orange Level Joined: 18 Nov 2010 Location: SE Minnesota Points: 18637 |
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A major thing when painting is paint adhesion. Besides having the metal clean (especially of any oil), a good primer is a big help.
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Mark
B10 Allis, 917 Allis, 7116 Simplicity, 7790 Simplicity Diesel, GTH-L Simplicity Ignorance is curable-----stupidity is not. |
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panelbeater
Bronze Level Joined: 05 Oct 2010 Location: kingston nh Points: 22 |
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it needs to be primed, i would use a self etching primer.
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http://s2.photobucket.com/albums/y45/panelbeater/
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Stan R
Orange Level Access Joined: 03 Dec 2009 Location: MA Points: 960 |
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Stainless does not need any rust protection. You could leave it as is.
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MNLonnie
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Baxter MN Points: 4791 |
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I'd have to agree with Stan, when you said stainless the first thing I thought was why paint it?
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Waukesha B, B, IB, G, styled WF, D15, 615 backhoe, 2-Oliver OC3's, 4 Ford Model T's, 3 Model A Fords, AV8 Coupe, AV8 Roadster, 1933 Ford Wrecker
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Rayhowling
Silver Level Joined: 02 Jan 2010 Location: Ont. Points: 178 |
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Some metal parts and some equipment I have welded and built, I take a torch and heat the metal up and you would be surprised how mush moisture is in metal. I have heated 1/4 to 1/2 inch metal flat steel and the water will bead and run off of the steel even if it has been sitting in the sunshine for a couple of days. The paint sticks to the metal and it does not rust near as quickly when heated before painting.
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DSeries4
Orange Level Joined: 12 Sep 2009 Location: Ontario, Canada Points: 7332 |
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I don't think paint (or primer for that matter) sticks to stainless all that well anyway. I would leave it as is.
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'49 G, '54 WD45, '55 CA, '56 WD45D, '57 WD45, '58 D14, '59 D14, '60 D14, '61 D15D, '66 D15II, '66 D21II, '67 D17IV, '67 D17IVD, '67 190XTD, '73 620, '76 185, '77 175, '84 8030, '85 6080
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Brian Jasper co. Ia
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Prairie City Ia Points: 10508 |
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If you really want paint to stick to your stainless, I'd sand blast it so it has a satin finish. Roughing it up gives the paint something to hang on to.
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"Any man who thinks he can be happy and prosperous by letting the government take care of him better take a closer look at the American Indian." Henry Ford
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Toscani SD
Bronze Level Joined: 28 Dec 2009 Location: South Dakota Points: 42 |
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if u dont rough it up a little and prime,it will fall off period.
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Unit3
Orange Level Joined: 17 Oct 2009 Location: NC Iowa Points: 5532 |
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Or buff until she shines like chrome.
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Dusty MI
Orange Level Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Location: Charlotte, Mi Points: 5058 |
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That moisture you are seeing may not be coming from the steel but from your torch, most gases contain moisture, especially natural gas and LP gas. Dusty
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917 H, '48 G, '65 D-10 series III "Allis Express"
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BrettPhillips
Orange Level Joined: 11 Sep 2009 Location: Strasburg, VA Points: 808 |
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Toscani's got it right. If you must paint it, sandblast and then use an adhesion promoting primer (like XIM's Flash Bond http://www.ximbonder.com/products_detail.asp?id=63 ) I had an awful time getting paint to stick to a stainless project at my day job, and this was the only thing that worked in the end.
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David Maddux
Orange Level Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Points: 2524 |
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We used to use the xim flash bond for hard to hold areas, works like a charm. Just not as cheap as other stuff.
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