AH

Andy H

20/08/2007 12:23 PM

Painting an old Power tool (hey JOAT)

Hey gang,
Ive been lurking for years. Long enough to know JOAT paints all his
tools yellow.
I have an old (1986) jointer / planer that I picked up on CraigsList
yesterday and I am thinking of painting it. It'll be white to match my
Jet stuff. Ive never painted on painted steel before, anyone have any
tips? I dont have to strip the old paint off do i?

What type of paint? What prep work should I do?

Thanks
Andy

--
:: Clever Sig here ::


This topic has 9 replies

tt

tom

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

20/08/2007 10:07 AM

On Aug 20, 9:23 am, Andy H <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hey gang,
> Ive been lurking for years. Long enough to know JOAT paints all his
> tools yellow.
> I have an old (1986) jointer / planer that I picked up on CraigsList
> yesterday and I am thinking of painting it. It'll be white to match my
> Jet stuff. Ive never painted on painted steel before, anyone have any
> tips? I dont have to strip the old paint off do i?
>
> What type of paint? What prep work should I do?
>
> Thanks
> Andy
>
> --
> :: Clever Sig here ::

I think if you just give it a bit of a roughening, and sand any rust
you find off of it and prime the bare spots, it'll look just fine.
Enamel's nice. Tom

bb

brandom11

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

20/08/2007 11:14 AM

On Aug 20, 10:07 am, tom <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Aug 20, 9:23 am, Andy H <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hey gang,
> > Ive been lurking for years. Long enough to know JOAT paints all his
> > tools yellow.
> > I have an old (1986) jointer / planer that I picked up on CraigsList
> > yesterday and I am thinking of painting it. It'll be white to match my
> > Jet stuff. Ive never painted on painted steel before, anyone have any
> > tips? I dont have to strip the old paint off do i?
>
> > What type of paint? What prep work should I do?
>
> > Thanks
> > Andy
>
> > --
> > :: Clever Sig here ::
>
> I think if you just give it a bit of a roughening, and sand any rust
> you find off of it and prime the bare spots, it'll look just fine.
> Enamel's nice. Tom

Ignore the paint!! spend the time tuning up the machine and doing more
woodworking. The wood won't know what color it is but it will know if
the knives are sharp and properly aligned.

LH

"Lew Hodgett"

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

20/08/2007 11:50 AM


"Andy H" wrote

> I have an old (1986) jointer / planer that I picked up on CraigsList
> yesterday and I am thinking of painting it. It'll be white to match my
> Jet stuff. Ive never painted on painted steel before, anyone have any
> tips? I dont have to strip the old paint off do i?
>
> What type of paint? What prep work should I do?

Prep it with phosphoric acid to convert any rust spots followed by a couple
of coats of Hammertone aerosol.

Your local hardware should have the stuff.

Lew


JJ

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

20/08/2007 3:29 PM

Mon, Aug 20, 2007, 12:23pm [email protected] (Andy=A0H) doth sayeth:
Hey gang,
=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0Ive been lurking for
years. Long enough to know JOAT paints all his tools yellow. <snip>
=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0What type of paint? What
prep work should I do?

A happy tool is a yellow tool.
http://www.holistic-online.com/Color/color_yellow.htm

I have better things to do than to sit around and put on a prize
winning paint job on my tools. Latex should work find, with a proper
primer, otherwide it doesn't stick well at all. But that takes time.
The new spray latex in a can may work well, seemed to on some od .50
ammo cans I got awhile back and hit with it, but then you need to tape
the parts you don't want painted. I put the ammo cans on top of my
garbage cans and gave 'em a fast coat, just to cover the rusty spots.
Worked fine..

I just wipe the tools off, use a decent brand of oil based ename, a
decent brush, and give 'em a couple of coats. Aside, I got a coupe of
bottles of glue the other day, and the guy asked if I mean two. I said
yes, and he said with some people a couple means three. Never heard
that one before. Anyway, two coats does it for me. One coat leaves a
lot of thin spots, two coats looks good, three coats is time wasted, at
least as far as tool painting goes.

I don't know how any color than yellow will apply. Next time I get
some tool paint, I'm going to try Rustoleum. If hey have it in yellow.



JOAT
I do things I don't know how to do, so that I might learn how to do
them.
- Picasso

BA

B A R R Y

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

21/08/2007 7:12 AM

Lee Michaels wrote:
> It has a lot more of the
> actual paint solids per can than consumer paints.

Rustoleum, Martin-Senor, PPG, etc... also make an excellent high-solids
industrial coating spray paint, but they aren't usually isn't sold in
consumer stores. Grainger and Napa "heavy duty" locations usually
carry something of the sort. The Napa stores that don't carry truck,
farm, or construction equipment parts can usually get it on a day's notice.

md

mac davis

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

21/08/2007 10:58 AM

On Mon, 20 Aug 2007 15:29:29 -0400, [email protected] (J T) wrote:

<snip>
>Aside, I got a coupe of bottles of glue the other day, and the guy asked if I mean two. I said yes, and he said with some people a couple means three. Never heard
>that one before.

Could be one of the reasons that so many marriages go all to hell.. rofl


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

Pp

Puckdropper

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

21/08/2007 3:09 AM

[email protected] (J T) wrote in
news:[email protected]:

*snip*

>
> I just wipe the tools off, use a decent brand of oil based ename,
> a
> decent brush, and give 'em a couple of coats. Aside, I got a coupe of
> bottles of glue the other day, and the guy asked if I mean two. I
> said yes, and he said with some people a couple means three. Never
> heard that one before. Anyway, two coats does it for me. One coat
> leaves a lot of thin spots, two coats looks good, three coats is time
> wasted, at least as far as tool painting goes.
>

*snip*

>
> JOAT

I'd heard that before. "couple of coats of paint" really means two, but
if it needs three give it three.

Puckdropper
--
Wise is the man who attempts to answer his question before asking it.

To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm

JJ

in reply to Puckdropper on 21/08/2007 3:09 AM

21/08/2007 12:30 AM

Tue, Aug 21, 2007, 3:09am (EDT+4) [email protected] (Puckdropper)
doth sayeth:
I'd heard that before. "couple of coats of paint" really means two, but
if it needs three give it three.

If my tools need three coats, they only think they do, they get
two.



JOAT
I do things I don't know how to do, so that I might learn how to do
them.
- Picasso

LM

"Lee Michaels"

in reply to Andy H on 20/08/2007 12:23 PM

20/08/2007 4:18 PM


"J T" <[email protected]> wrote

I don't know how any color than yellow will apply. Next time I get
some tool paint, I'm going to try Rustoleum. If hey have it in yellow.

Rustoleum takes forever to dry. Usually two days per coat. I did a number
of projects where Rustoleum was required. Using freshly welded mild steel it
took me 8 days per project to paint. two days per side for the primer and
two days per side for the top coat.

An engineer friend turned me on to this stuff. They don't even call it
paint. The call it high solids industrial coating. It has a lot more of the
actual paint solids per can than consumer paints.

http://www.seymourpaint.com/index.cfm/products/?id=94

It is expensive, but does a great job.



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