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Phil Hansen July 24th 04 06:00 AM

Info on latex paint
 
There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa). Phoned one of
the major paint companies today. The only latex paint they have is for
coating the inside of spray booths. When covered with overspray it is
peeled off and recoated.
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?

Just need to know G
Thanks

--

Phillip Hansen
Skil-Phil Solutions


Lew Hodgett July 24th 04 06:20 AM

Info on latex paint
 

"Phil Hansen" writes:

There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa).

snip
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?


Latex paint is a water based rather than an oil based product.

Believe it or not, it was introduced right after WWII as an interior flat
finish product for houses.

Those early efforts were to say the least, less than spectacular.

Latex paints have come a long way since then.

Today they are the primary paint for the architectural market. (Houses,
industrial buildings, etc)

Latex is replacing oil based paint almost everywhere in the US, because of
environmental issues.

Latex forms a skins and bonds to the surface as opposed to oil based which
penetrates the surface when forming a bond.

I'm not a paint chemist so some of the details might not be totally up to
snuff, but the general idea is accurate.

HTH


--
Lew

S/A: Challenge, The Bullet Proof Boat, (Under Construction in the Southland)
Visit: http://home.earthlink.net/~lewhodgett for Pictures



scarfinger July 24th 04 06:24 AM

Info on latex paint
 
In America it is quite common to use latex paint on the interiors and
exteriors of houses. It is thinned with ordinary water, so it's a
do-it-yourself project to paint your own house with it. We don't strip
the old paint off, just paint a new color over the old. It's available
in any color you want, but the most common are light pastels. It's
quite inexpensive unless you want the 'designer' brands like Ralph
Lauren.

Karl


Phil Hansen wrote:
There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa). Phoned one

of
the major paint companies today. The only latex paint they have is

for
coating the inside of spray booths. When covered with overspray it is


peeled off and recoated.
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?

Just need to know G
Thanks

--

Phillip Hansen
Skil-Phil Solutions



Upscale July 24th 04 07:57 AM

Info on latex paint
 
"Phil Hansen" wrote in message
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?


What people have failed to mention to you, is that latex paint cleans up
with water. That's as long as the paint hasn't completely dried. That means
that your brushes, your hands, your paint tray all clean up with a little
rubbing by running them under the water tap. That's its biggest benefit as
far as I'm concerned.



MikeG July 24th 04 01:30 PM

Info on latex paint
 
In article ,
says...
There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa). Phoned one of
the major paint companies today. The only latex paint they have is for
coating the inside of spray booths. When covered with overspray it is
peeled off and recoated.
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?

Just need to know G
Thanks




It is possible that, if you in South Africa follow the British
conventions, the water based latex paint would be called emulsion.



--
MikeG
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net


Phil Hansen July 24th 04 02:30 PM

Info on latex paint
 
In article . com,
says...
It is possible that, if you in South Africa follow the British
conventions, the water based latex paint would be called emulsion.

Thanks for that. That would equate to what we call PVA. A water based
interior and exterior paint.

Thanks to all the others who replied
--

Phillip Hansen
Skil-Phil Solutions


Leon July 24th 04 02:48 PM

Info on latex paint
 

"Upscale" wrote in message
t.cable.rogers.com...

What people have failed to mention to you, is that latex paint cleans up
with water. That's as long as the paint hasn't completely dried. That

means
that your brushes, your hands, your paint tray all clean up with a little
rubbing by running them under the water tap. That's its biggest benefit as
far as I'm concerned.


Personally I will prefer oil based clean up as opposed to latex clean up.



Eric Tonks July 24th 04 08:13 PM

Info on latex paint
 

"MikeG" wrote in message
ews.com...
In article ,
says...
There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa). Phoned one of
the major paint companies today. The only latex paint they have is for
coating the inside of spray booths. When covered with overspray it is
peeled off and recoated.
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?

Just need to know G
Thanks




It is possible that, if you in South Africa follow the British
conventions, the water based latex paint would be called emulsion.


When it was first introduced, I remember it was referred to as "rubber
based" paint as opposed to "oil based paint". Now it is called "acrylic
latex paint" versus "alkyd oil paint". Names tend to vary in different
regions of the world. Latex is thinned and washed up with water, oil paint
is thinned and washed up with solvent.



David July 25th 04 10:07 AM

Info on latex paint
 
Could you be more specific as to why? I could see someone arguing as to the
performance of an oil based paint, but how could the cleanup be
easier/better for oil-based paint? Even if you dont mind the smell of paint
thinner, there is still the fact that you cant pour the excess paint or
dirty thinner down the drain without breaking laws in just about every
state. (Not to mention polluting).

Why do you prefer the oil-based cleanup?

--
Thanks,
David W. Lovell
( Intrepid )

"Leon" wrote in message
m...

"Upscale" wrote in message
t.cable.rogers.com...

What people have failed to mention to you, is that latex paint cleans up
with water. That's as long as the paint hasn't completely dried. That

means
that your brushes, your hands, your paint tray all clean up with a

little
rubbing by running them under the water tap. That's its biggest benefit

as
far as I'm concerned.


Personally I will prefer oil based clean up as opposed to latex clean up.





Greg Millen July 25th 04 12:07 PM

Info on latex paint
 
G'day Phil,

we call latex "acrylic" which is described as"

"Acrylic paints are a synthetic media made by suspending pigment in
synthetic polymer emulsified by water. They are essentially plastic paints
that are water-soluble and have good adhesive qualities. They are very
stable. They resist oxidization and chemical decomposition, and will not
yellow over time."

SA and OZ are somewhat similar so I expect you use the same name.

cheers,

Greg


"Phil Hansen" wrote in message ...
There is a lot of mention of the us of latex paint.
I have never come across latex paint here (South Africa). Phoned one of
the major paint companies today. The only latex paint they have is for
coating the inside of spray booths. When covered with overspray it is
peeled off and recoated.
What is the latex paint that is so often mentioned?
What is it used for?
What is the thinner?

Just need to know G
Thanks

--

Phillip Hansen
Skil-Phil Solutions




Leon July 25th 04 05:11 PM

Info on latex paint
 

"David" wrote in message
news:UKKMc.25929$eM2.19352@attbi_s51...
Could you be more specific as to why? I could see someone arguing as to

the
performance of an oil based paint, but how could the cleanup be
easier/better for oil-based paint? Even if you dont mind the smell of

paint
thinner, there is still the fact that you cant pour the excess paint or
dirty thinner down the drain without breaking laws in just about every
state. (Not to mention polluting).

Why do you prefer the oil-based cleanup?


In the beginning, I hated the thought of dealing with oil based paints until
I painted a couple of houses.
To address the waste, I live in Houston TX, we have centers to deposit the
waste thinner at no charge. With that in mind, having helped a friend paint
house interiors for the last 7 years, I have found that cleaning a brush
regularly during the day, "at least at lunch time and the end of the day",
dropping the brush in 2 separate cans of thinner and then rinsing the brush
in soap and water takes about 3 minutes for a totally clean brush. We can
make a gallon of thinner last a week when painting every day. When using
brushes to cut in the walls with latex paint, the clean up normally takes 3
time longer with soap and water. The thinner on oil based paints takes the
work out of clean up. Additionally, when actually painting and you have the
inevitable spatter or drip on the floor, oil based wipes up immediately with
a thinner soaked rag as opposed to latex smearing around with a wet rag.
I'll take a small oil based cleanup on carpet any day over the same clean up
with latex paint.



Phil Hansen July 25th 04 05:29 PM

Info on latex paint
 
In article ,
says...
G'day Phil,

And to you too mate,
It's funny but it seems every continent has its own naming convention
for the same thing.
Latex
Acrylic
PVA
Emulsion.
I wondered why somebody would paint their house with what we would use
to line a spray booth!
Anyway now I know. G

BTW The last time I heard from you we could not play cricket.
This time we cannot play rugby.
Are these well timed pokes / responses? G
Cheers
--

Phillip Hansen
Skil-Phil Solutions


J T July 25th 04 06:23 PM

Info on latex paint
 
Sun, Jul 25, 2004, 6:29pm (EDT+6) (Phil=A0Hansen) says:
snip It's funny but it seems every continent has its own naming
convention for the same thing.
Latex
Acrylic
PVA
Emulsion.snip

And, yet we're all speaking English.
LMAO



JOAT
Expensive tennis shoes won't cure a sore toe.
- Bazooka Joe
THE NEW COPPERPLATE
http://www.banjer.com/midi/newcopp.mid


[email protected] July 25th 04 06:48 PM

Info on latex paint
 
I've found that preconditioning the brush prior to dipping into the
finish is a BIG step in cleaning as well as preventing the bristles
from stiffening by stopping the finish from drying near the ferrule.
I was raised used oil based stuff as that is what was available and
early WB stuff was a giant step backwards. Not so today! WB stuff
works now and is what I've switched to. Still have MS on the shelf
for infrequent needs.

On Sun, 25 Jul 2004 16:11:09 GMT, "Leon"
wrote:

With that in mind, having helped a friend paint
house interiors for the last 7 years, I have found that cleaning a brush
regularly during the day, "at least at lunch time and the end of the day",
dropping the brush in 2 separate cans of thinner and then rinsing the brush
in soap and water takes about 3 minutes for a totally clean brush.



Ed Clarke July 25th 04 07:46 PM

Info on latex paint
 
In article , Phil Hansen wrote:
In article ,
says...
G'day Phil,

And to you too mate,
It's funny but it seems every continent has its own naming convention
for the same thing.
Latex
Acrylic
PVA
Emulsion.
I wondered why somebody would paint their house with what we would use
to line a spray booth!


PVA means poly-vinyl-acetate to me. That nasty old white glue that
everyone sells for too much money for the performance you get out of
it.

[email protected] July 25th 04 09:24 PM

Info on latex paint
 
On 25 Jul 2004 18:46:22 GMT, Ed Clarke wrote:

In article , Phil Hansen wrote:
In article ,
says...
G'day Phil,

And to you too mate,
It's funny but it seems every continent has its own naming convention
for the same thing.
Latex
Acrylic
PVA
Emulsion.
I wondered why somebody would paint their house with what we would use
to line a spray booth!


PVA means poly-vinyl-acetate to me. That nasty old white glue that
everyone sells for too much money for the performance you get out of
it.



white glue, yup.

also the gazillion other members of that chemical family tree, ranging
from some really expensive archival grade adhesives to yellow glue to,
yes, latex paint

Leon July 25th 04 10:32 PM

Info on latex paint
 
Yeah I do that too, really helps the paint flow off the brush. I find that
Wooster brushes have good seals and don't let the water or thinner run down
the brush handle if you get too much on the brush. Oddly, Purdy lets lots
of thinner or water run down the handle. I suspect they have no seal.


wrote in message
...
I've found that preconditioning the brush prior to dipping into the
finish is a BIG step in cleaning as well as preventing the bristles
from stiffening by stopping the finish from drying near the ferrule.
I was raised used oil based stuff as that is what was available and
early WB stuff was a giant step backwards. Not so today! WB stuff
works now and is what I've switched to. Still have MS on the shelf
for infrequent needs.

On Sun, 25 Jul 2004 16:11:09 GMT, "Leon"
wrote:

With that in mind, having helped a friend paint
house interiors for the last 7 years, I have found that cleaning a brush
regularly during the day, "at least at lunch time and the end of the

day",
dropping the brush in 2 separate cans of thinner and then rinsing the

brush
in soap and water takes about 3 minutes for a totally clean brush.





J T July 25th 04 10:35 PM

Info on latex paint
 
Sun, Jul 25, 2004, 6:46pm (EDT+4) (Ed=A0Clarke)
PVA means poly-vinyl-acetate to me. That nasty old white glue that
everyone sells for too much money for the performance you get out of it. =


You limit yourself. A list:
Paralyzed Veterans of America
Partitioned Viterbi Algorithm
Passenger Vessel Association (trade organization)
Patterned Vertical Alignment (Samsung)
People Value Added
Performing Visual Arts
Personal Virtual Assistant (Conita) Photovoltaic Array
Polyvinyl Acetate
Polyvinyl Alcohol
Population Viability Analysis
Port Vulnerability Assessment
Positive Vorticity Advection
Potato Virus A (my personal favorite)
Preferred Vendor Assessment
Present Value Analysis
Production Verification Audit
Produit =C0 Valeur Ajout=E9e
Professional Virtual Assistant
Project Validation Assessment

Courtesy of
http://www.acronymfinder.com/af-quer...&Acronym=3DPVA



JOAT
Expensive tennis shoes won't cure a sore toe.
- Bazooka Joe
THE NEW COPPERPLATE http://www.banjer.com/midi/newcopp.mid


Leon July 25th 04 10:36 PM

Info on latex paint
 


"Father Haskell" wrote in message
...

Let the paint settle out, decant the thinner. It works as well as fresh
for cleaning the brush. With care, you won't have any thinner to dump;
it'll all evaporate by the time you need a new can.


That is why I use 2 Coffee cans of thinner, 1 for the initial clean up and
the second for the final cleaning. The second one gets dumped into the
first on the next day and filled fresh again.

Oil-based color is richer, deeper than latex. WAY richer and deeper.

You'd
expect it from pigmented varnish compared to pigmented rubber.


Sticks better too IMHO. Also IMHO you can scrub it harder after it has
cured.



J T July 25th 04 10:39 PM

Info on latex paint
 
Sun, Jul 25, 2004, 3:23pm (EDT-3) (Father=A0Haskell)
claims:
Oil-based color is richer, deeper than latex. WAY richer and deeper.
You'd expect it from pigmented varnish compared to pigmented rubber.

Dunno about that, but oil-based works much better on painting my
tools than latex. Use latex for about everyting else.



JOAT
Expensive tennis shoes won't cure a sore toe.
- Bazooka Joe
THE NEW COPPERPLATE
http://www.banjer.com/midi/newcopp.mid


Father Haskell July 25th 04 11:23 PM

Info on latex paint
 
Leon wrote:

"David" wrote in message
news:UKKMc.25929$eM2.19352@attbi_s51..
Could you be more specific as to why? I could see someone arguing as to

the
performance of an oil based paint, but how could the cleanup be
easier/better for oil-based paint? Even if you dont mind the smell of

paint
thinner, there is still the fact that you cant pour the excess paint or
dirty thinner down the drain without breaking laws in just about every
state. (Not to mention polluting).

Why do you prefer the oil-based cleanup?


In the beginning, I hated the thought of dealing with oil based paints until
I painted a couple of houses.
To address the waste, I live in Houston TX, we have centers to deposit the
waste thinner at no charge. With that in mind, having helped a friend paint
house interiors for the last 7 years, I have found that cleaning a brush
regularly during the day, "at least at lunch time and the end of the day",
dropping the brush in 2 separate cans of thinner and then rinsing the brush
in soap and water takes about 3 minutes for a totally clean brush.


Let the paint settle out, decant the thinner. It works as well as fresh
for cleaning the brush. With care, you won't have any thinner to dump;
it'll all evaporate by the time you need a new can.

We can
make a gallon of thinner last a week when painting every day. When using
brushes to cut in the walls with latex paint, the clean up normally takes 3
time longer with soap and water. The thinner on oil based paints takes the
work out of clean up. Additionally, when actually painting and you have the
inevitable spatter or drip on the floor, oil based wipes up immediately with
a thinner soaked rag as opposed to latex smearing around with a wet rag.
I'll take a small oil based cleanup on carpet any day over the same clean up
with latex paint.


Oil-based color is richer, deeper than latex. WAY richer and deeper. You'd
expect it from pigmented varnish compared to pigmented rubber.

Greg Millen July 26th 04 08:54 AM

Info on latex paint
 

"Phil Hansen" wrote in message ...

BTW The last time I heard from you we could not play cricket.
This time we cannot play rugby.
Are these well timed pokes / responses? G


Gudday Phil, if I were to reply every time we kicked your *rse in sport
you'd be swamped!

Lol,

cheers mate,

Greg




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