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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic
pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. |
#2
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote:
I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. Probably depends upon the Hammerite you are using and the plastic the pipe is made from :-) IIRC, the original Hammerite used xylene as a solvent. Xylene badly degrades uPVC, a common material for pipes. However, there are now water based Hammerite paints, which are unlikely to affect any plastic. -- Colin Bignell |
#3
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On Wed, 19 May 2021 19:43:27 +0100, nightjar
wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. Probably depends upon the Hammerite you are using and the plastic the pipe is made from :-) IIRC, the original Hammerite used xylene as a solvent. Xylene badly degrades uPVC, a common material for pipes. However, there are now water based Hammerite paints, which are unlikely to affect any plastic. Thanks. I think this is in between, as petroleum based paint, so it sounds like I should be careful. What is the recommended paint for an outdoor pipe. (One of my neighbours has put up a white pipe when all the drains etc are black.) |
#4
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On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote:
I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. It depends on the Hammerite and on the plastic of the pipe. Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. The only way to be sure is paint a test sample and see what happens. On PVC pipe it might not even adhere for long if it gets in the sun. A spill of Hammerite onto my HDPE green bin has just delaminated as a sheet after a couple of years in the weather. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#5
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On 19/05/2021 20:46, Martin Brown wrote:
On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe.Â* Mr Google seems to think it is okay.Â* For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. It depends on the Hammerite and on the plastic of the pipe. Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. The only way to be sure is paint a test sample and see what happens. On PVC pipe it might not even adhere for long if it gets in the sun. A spill of Hammerite onto my HDPE green bin has just delaminated as a sheet after a couple of years in the weather. PVC is slowly dissolved in xylene but I would have thought this would improve adherence with a xylene based paint? There are some paints formulated for PVC: https://www.zinsseruk.com/howto/how-to-paint-over-pvc/ I presume there are others but this primer seems to be the gold standard. |
#6
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In article ,
Fredxx wrote: On 19/05/2021 20:46, Martin Brown wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. It depends on the Hammerite and on the plastic of the pipe. Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. The only way to be sure is paint a test sample and see what happens. On PVC pipe it might not even adhere for long if it gets in the sun. A spill of Hammerite onto my HDPE green bin has just delaminated as a sheet after a couple of years in the weather. PVC is slowly dissolved in xylene but I would have thought this would improve adherence with a xylene based paint? There are some paints formulated for PVC: https://www.zinsseruk.com/howto/how-to-paint-over-pvc/ I presume there are others but this primer seems to be the gold standard. My pvc downpipes are mainly grey and I painted them black with ordinary gloss paint about 40 years ago. Still pretty good. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#7
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Scott wrote :
Thanks. I think this is in between, as petroleum based paint, so it sounds like I should be careful. What is the recommended paint for an outdoor pipe. (One of my neighbours has put up a white pipe when all the drains etc are black.) Similar problem here of white and grey pipes, I repainted with Lidl black paint intended for rusty metal a few years ago - they are fine. |
#8
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On 19/05/2021 20:46, Martin Brown wrote:
Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. Hmm, that doesn't bode well for a plastic bodied CCTV camera I've screwed to a freshly painted w/hammerite metal bracket? -- Adrian C |
#9
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On 19 May 2021 at 21:35:53 BST, "charles" wrote:
In article , Fredxx wrote: On 19/05/2021 20:46, Martin Brown wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. It depends on the Hammerite and on the plastic of the pipe. Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. The only way to be sure is paint a test sample and see what happens. On PVC pipe it might not even adhere for long if it gets in the sun. A spill of Hammerite onto my HDPE green bin has just delaminated as a sheet after a couple of years in the weather. PVC is slowly dissolved in xylene but I would have thought this would improve adherence with a xylene based paint? There are some paints formulated for PVC: https://www.zinsseruk.com/howto/how-to-paint-over-pvc/ I presume there are others but this primer seems to be the gold standard. My pvc downpipes are mainly grey and I painted them black with ordinary gloss paint about 40 years ago. Still pretty good. I did this - I think on advice from this NG - last year. Only been on a year but no apparent problems, and looks a lot better. Did take a long time to dry though - couple of days in quite cool conditions (10C IIRC). -- Cheers, Rob |
#10
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RJH expressed precisely :
I did this - I think on advice from this NG - last year. Only been on a year but no apparent problems, and looks a lot better. Did take a long time to dry though - couple of days in quite cool conditions (10C IIRC). My 40 year old black pipes, had faded quite a bit, so the paint refreshed the colour. |
#11
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On 19/05/2021 20:21, Scott wrote:
On Wed, 19 May 2021 19:43:27 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe. Mr Google seems to think it is okay. For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. Probably depends upon the Hammerite you are using and the plastic the pipe is made from :-) IIRC, the original Hammerite used xylene as a solvent. Xylene badly degrades uPVC, a common material for pipes. However, there are now water based Hammerite paints, which are unlikely to affect any plastic. Thanks. I think this is in between, as petroleum based paint, so it sounds like I should be careful. What is the recommended paint for an outdoor pipe. (One of my neighbours has put up a white pipe when all the drains etc are black.) I have always used oil based household paint without problems. If the paint has a list of constituents, you can check them for compatibility with PVC he https://www.calpaclab.com/pvc-polyvi...ibility-chart/ -- Colin Bignell |
#12
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On 20/05/2021 10:28, nightjar wrote:
On 19/05/2021 20:21, Scott wrote: On Wed, 19 May 2021 19:43:27 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe.Â* Mr Google seems to think it is okay.Â* For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. Probably depends upon the Hammerite you are using and the plastic the pipe is made from :-) IIRC, the original Hammerite used xylene as a solvent. Xylene badly degrades uPVC, a common material for pipes. However, there are now water based Hammerite paints, which are unlikely to affect any plastic. Thanks.Â* I think this is in between, as petroleum based paint, so it sounds like I should be careful.Â* What is the recommended paint for an outdoor pipe.Â* (One of my neighbours has put up a white pipe when all the drains etc are black.) I have always used oil based household paint without problems. If the paint has a list of constituents, you can check them for compatibility with PVC he https://www.calpaclab.com/pvc-polyvi...ibility-chart/ That is a very useful reference for edge cases. I find that gloss paint and particularly black paint on south facing pipes flakes off after a while. Then it is facing into prevailing weather and strong sunshine. Paint film and PVC don't expand at quite the same rates is my guess. -- Regards, Martin Brown |
#13
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On 20/05/2021 10:39, Martin Brown wrote:
On 20/05/2021 10:28, nightjar wrote: On 19/05/2021 20:21, Scott wrote: On Wed, 19 May 2021 19:43:27 +0100, nightjar wrote: On 19/05/2021 19:13, Scott wrote: I am wondering if anyone has tried using Hammerite paint on a plastic pipe.Â* Mr Google seems to think it is okay.Â* For context, I am painting a steel fence so it would be very convenient to use the same paint on the pipe even if it is over-specified but not if it is likely to cause problems. Probably depends upon the Hammerite you are using and the plastic the pipe is made from :-) IIRC, the original Hammerite used xylene as a solvent. Xylene badly degrades uPVC, a common material for pipes. However, there are now water based Hammerite paints, which are unlikely to affect any plastic. Thanks.Â* I think this is in between, as petroleum based paint, so it sounds like I should be careful.Â* What is the recommended paint for an outdoor pipe.Â* (One of my neighbours has put up a white pipe when all the drains etc are black.) I have always used oil based household paint without problems. If the paint has a list of constituents, you can check them for compatibility with PVC he https://www.calpaclab.com/pvc-polyvi...ibility-chart/ That is a very useful reference for edge cases. I find that gloss paint and particularly black paint on south facing pipes flakes off after a while. Then it is facing into prevailing weather and strong sunshine. Paint film and PVC don't expand at quite the same rates is my guess. FWIW Sadolin Classic was still going strong on an elderly relative's well-weathered gutters and downpipes when it was sold 7 years after I applied it (there being nothing else readily available to match the soffits etc). -- Robin reply-to address is (intended to be) valid |
#14
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I think one must avoid that plastic that seems to have almost a rubbery feel
to the surface. That is going to eventually shed and the paint with it. I tried it once on a plastic pole which had that kind of grip finish, and it lasted 1 year. Incidentally, many of those ram sticks you buy with the swing arm cover seem to be going sticky as the surface leaches away with time. Brian -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! Harry Bloomfield; "Esq." wrote in message ... RJH expressed precisely : I did this - I think on advice from this NG - last year. Only been on a year but no apparent problems, and looks a lot better. Did take a long time to dry though - couple of days in quite cool conditions (10C IIRC). My 40 year old black pipes, had faded quite a bit, so the paint refreshed the colour. |
#15
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Thanks for the comments.
Let's forget all about Hammerite. A neighbour (non resident) and put up a white plastic outlet pipe when all the drainpipes and rhones are black. What would be the best way to make it blend in as a pre-emptive strike? |
#16
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On 20/05/2021 06:14, Adrian Caspersz wrote:
On 19/05/2021 20:46, Martin Brown wrote: Old very high VOC Hammerite with xylene you might embrittle the pipe even if it is something nominally robust. If it is a polystyrene pipe it will be destroyed. Modern Hammerite might also embrittle pipes longer term but probably isn't quite as damaging as the old formulation. Hmm, that doesn't bode well for a plastic bodied CCTV camera I've screwed to a freshly painted w/hammerite metal bracket? I suspect that once the solvent has evaporated 99% of the issues go away. |
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