Thread: Paint for metal
View Single Post
  #3   Report Post  
Posted to alt.home.repair
Steve B[_10_] Steve B[_10_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 3,055
Default Paint for metal


wrote in message
m...
On 7/19/2011 12:16 AM, Steve B wrote:
In another life, from 1984 to 1995, I was a steel erection contractor.
During that time, I bought enamel meant to paint ornamental metal, and
just
about any other metal from the local Las Vegas supplier for about $15 a
gallon. Then there came all the California regs (where the paint was
produced), and they went to other kinds of paint. I sold the company
right
after that, and lost touch with paints.

Fast forward to today.

I have bought some alklyd enamel from a local supplier to do some of the
metal work I've been doing, and overall, I'm satisfied. Price is decent,
thins with mineral spirits, color is holding up.

Wifey goes to HD to get some special turquoise paint to redo security
door
and patio table and chairs set. I tell her to tell the guy what the
paint
is to be used for. She brings it home, and me, like a doofus, put it in
the
pot not looking. It's freaking gloss latex for bathrooms. Well,
needless
to say, it's going back.

What is available today, even if I have to go to Jones Paint, a local
contractor supply? Is alklyd enamel the way to go? I like Rustoleum,
but
don't think I can get it mixed in the color I want, and I don't want to
experiment with $50 worth of paint. Is plain enamel for metal still
made?
The local Ace has some industrial colors, but not sure if they mix
colors.

Specific names of the paints would be most helpful. And that is
technical
name, not brand name.

TIA

Steve



I suspect any good metal primer, along with an exterior alkyd enamel,
would do fine. The metal has to be immaculately clean and, if iron, not
allowed exposure to salt, fingerprints, etc., unless cleaned. Like auto
bodies, little dings will allow corrosion and then the paint peels.


I have since gone to the local Ace, and they have white base enamel paint,
which they can tint to any color. Problem solved. It is RustOleum brand,
something I have used many times. I shall still use the alklyd enamel in
the terra cotta color, as I have a couple of cases left of that.

Steve