DIYbanter

DIYbanter (https://www.diybanter.com/)
-   Home Repair (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/)
-   -   nonskid paint additive (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/327411-nonskid-paint-additive.html)

Red August 18th 11 05:48 AM

nonskid paint additive
 
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.
But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. Am I missing anything?

Red

Ed Pawlowski[_2_] August 18th 11 10:51 AM

nonskid paint additive
 

"Red" wrote in message
...
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.
But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. Am I missing anything?

Red


The one time I used it, I just sprinkled it on the top coat of paint. It
worked well. Probably would work in your case too, but the paint is going
to cover the grit a bit. Worst case is you sprinkle more on top.


dadiOH[_3_] August 18th 11 12:21 PM

nonskid paint additive
 
Red wrote:
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.


But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. Am I missing anything?

Red


Nope, it works just fine. It would work better if you primed, painted,
sprinkled sand in wet paint and then painted again after the first coat is
dry. Reason? The primer dries thicker than the top coats so sand in primer
would be less effective.

--

dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico




Joe August 18th 11 07:44 PM

nonskid paint additive
 
On Aug 17, 11:48*pm, Red wrote:
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? *It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. *I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.
But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. *Am I missing anything?

Red


In several floors I have done with epoxy over concrete, only one with
a very fine anti-skid additive was successful. My latest (Sears epoxy
kit) was furnished with the usual fine sand and is a total mess just
like earlier ones. In any traffic area the sand scuffs off regardless
of the number of epoxy layers, and the resultant little craters are
dirt traps that are totally unacceptable. Even when the area is
untouched by traffic, the sand grains make sweeping an aggravation.
Haven't researched anti-skids yet, but I suspect the people that have
boat decks have some good stuff to solve the problem of what works
best on a wood ramp.

Joe

[email protected] August 19th 11 01:50 AM

nonskid paint additive
 
On Thu, 18 Aug 2011 07:21:38 -0400, "dadiOH"
wrote:

Red wrote:
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.


But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. Am I missing anything?

Red


Nope, it works just fine. It would work better if you primed, painted,
sprinkled sand in wet paint and then painted again after the first coat is
dry. Reason? The primer dries thicker than the top coats so sand in primer
would be less effective.

Depends on the primer, and the paint.

Tony Miklos[_2_] August 19th 11 11:14 PM

nonskid paint additive
 
On 8/18/2011 8:50 PM, wrote:
On Thu, 18 Aug 2011 07:21:38 -0400,
wrote:

Red wrote:
Is there any good reason why clean play sand shouldn't be used as a
nonskid paint additive on a wood ramp? It's more coarse than
commercial additives but in my case it's free vs $6 for purchasing
some. I was told that the fine commercial stuff stays suspended in
the paint whereas the sand is heavier and would settle to the bottom.


But if you sprinkled the sand over applied wet primer, let dry, and
covered it with a coat of paint it would appear that you would have a
good nonskid surface. Am I missing anything?

Red


Nope, it works just fine. It would work better if you primed, painted,
sprinkled sand in wet paint and then painted again after the first coat is
dry. Reason? The primer dries thicker than the top coats so sand in primer
would be less effective.

Depends on the primer, and the paint.


Yep. I have some high build primer with an epoxy hardener that could
hide the sand completely, and some lacquer primer that wouldn't be thick
enough to make the sand stick.


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 02:54 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter