Lt

"LineVoltageHalogen"

17/04/2006 11:23 AM

Connector Bolts.

Greetings All, I have just finished my first real wood project (baby
cradle) and the wife has dictated that it must be white to match the
room. With that said I only can find bronze connector bolts and I
would like to have them in white. I tried painting them (Krylon spray
primer then paint) but it will not stick? Can anyone direct me to a
seller of white connector bolts or let me in on the secret to make
paint stick to bronze bolts. Any and all help would be appreciated.

TFD


This topic has 9 replies

Mo

"Marilynn or Bruce Pearce"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 7:03 PM


1) Did you clean any oil / dirt off bolts?
2) Apply a primer to metal. Zinsser or white metal primer
...no color bleeding.
2) White epoxy appliance paint might stick better?




"LineVoltageHalogen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Greetings All, I have just finished my first real wood project (baby
> cradle) and the wife has dictated that it must be white to match the
> room. With that said I only can find bronze connector bolts and I
> would like to have them in white. I tried painting them (Krylon spray
> primer then paint) but it will not stick? Can anyone direct me to a
> seller of white connector bolts or let me in on the secret to make
> paint stick to bronze bolts. Any and all help would be appreciated.
>
> TFD
>

Lt

"LineVoltageHalogen"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 12:09 PM

I did not clean the bolts. I made the assumption (probably wrong to
do) that the bolts in their nice new plastic bag were clean. Can I
pick up the epoxy paint through Rockler?

TFD

Lt

"LineVoltageHalogen"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 7:52 PM

When I first put on the primer it coated nicely, the same with the
paint. The bolts have cured for about 2 weeks now and when I run my
nail over the face of the connector bolt the paint comes off quite
easily, you see the bronze underneath.

I am going to give a new set of bolts a nice cleaning in alchool and
then a scrub with an abrasive pad as suggested. Hopefully this fixes
the problem

Lt

"LineVoltageHalogen"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

18/04/2006 7:11 AM

I think they are actually steel bolts that have some type of paint or
coating on them to make them look like bronze:

http://www.rockler.com/product.cfm?page=368&SearchHandle=DADBDBDHDADADDDGGFGBDHGBGBGFGGGBCNDJGBGBGCCNDEGDGCDJCNDJDJGBDCCNGBDCDBGFGEDDDDGBDDGFDFGBDADADADBDADADADBDEGDGPGOGOGFGDHEGPHCCAGCGPGMHEDADADADEDADADADADADADADBDFDADADADBDADADADADADADADADADADADADBDADADADBDEGDGPGOGOGFGDHEGPHCCAGCGPGMHEDADADADBDB&filter=connector%20bolt

Lt

"LineVoltageHalogen"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

19/04/2006 7:10 AM

I did do that. I used a 3M abrasive pad and put the bolt in my drill
and spun the Dickin's out of it against the pad. I had nice clean
metal and I then washed it in alcohol. When it dried I primed it with
Krylon zinc metal primer. I am going to let that dry for a day or two
before I applyl the first coat of white paint.

L

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 3:33 PM


"LineVoltageHalogen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I did not clean the bolts. I made the assumption (probably wrong to
> do) that the bolts in their nice new plastic bag were clean. Can I
> pick up the epoxy paint through Rockler?
>
> TFD
>

The epoxy paint isn't really necessary. Your problem is that the primer
isn't adhering. No matter what paint you put over primer that is not
adhering, it won't adhere. There's nothing magical about epoxy paint. Go
ahead and clean all of your hardware in alcohol and even give it a rub down
with a 3M pad or like abrasive pad.

What are you observing when you hit it with the primer? Does the primer
seem to be going on evenly, but failing to adhere after it's dry? Or - is
it producing fisheyes when you spray it on?

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

SM

"Stephen M"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 3:25 PM

Those bolts were more likely coated with a light oil to prevent rust.


"LineVoltageHalogen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I did not clean the bolts. I made the assumption (probably wrong to
> do) that the bolts in their nice new plastic bag were clean. Can I
> pick up the epoxy paint through Rockler?
>
> TFD
>


--
NewsGuy.Com 30Gb $9.95 Carry Forward and On Demand Bandwidth

MM

"Mike Marlow"

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

19/04/2006 8:35 AM


"LineVoltageHalogen" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> When I first put on the primer it coated nicely, the same with the
> paint. The bolts have cured for about 2 weeks now and when I run my
> nail over the face of the connector bolt the paint comes off quite
> easily, you see the bronze underneath.
>
> I am going to give a new set of bolts a nice cleaning in alchool and
> then a scrub with an abrasive pad as suggested. Hopefully this fixes
> the problem
>

I just looked at the link that someone else posted and am wondering if these
are the same connector bolts you are using? If so, scrape the bronze
coating off before priming.

--

-Mike-
[email protected]

l

in reply to "LineVoltageHalogen" on 17/04/2006 11:23 AM

17/04/2006 11:28 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
Stephen M <[email protected]> wrote:
>Those bolts were more likely coated with a light oil to prevent rust.
>
<...snipped...>

I know some climates are worse than others for causing corrosion of
metals, but sheesh, I never heard of a place where bronze rusts!


--

Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland
[email protected]


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