Bill,
I just got the Eastwood coating setup last week. Tried to get the one from
Harbor Freight, but they say they have discontinued it. They won't
elaborate - I wonder if there are legal issues such as patents involved?
Didn't care for the price of Eastwood's IR heater, so I got a propane
powered heater that is supposed to heat via infrared. It produces lots more
heat than a heat lamp, so I'm hopeful it will do larger items like rear end
housings. Will let you know.
The first item I powder coated came out very nice. One thin spot, but it was
in an out of the way area. Wife's old oven worked just fine.
Now if I could find some powder in John Deere green and yellow.
Gwyn Reedy
Brandon, Florida
mailto:mgr@mgrcorp.com
> -----Original Message-----
> From: owner-oletrucks@autox.team.net
> [mailto:owner-oletrucks@autox.team.net]On Behalf Of Bill Broadway
> Sent: Tuesday, October 24, 2000 3:06 PM
> To: Oletrucks
> Subject: RE: [oletrucks] New to the list
>
>
> > Sounds like a good deal. How do you set up the lamp? does it have to be
> > in it's own enclosed area with the piece or can it be out in
> the open? I'm
> > trying to think of a way you would do a frame. It would be a pain to
> > empty out the garage and heat it up to 500 deg and hope nothing catches
> > fire... but if you could do it in the drive way... BTW, if it does work,
> > maybe you can do a write up for us curious folks.
> > -alfie
>
> I'm testing the lamp now, I bought one of those circular clip on
> lamps with
> the reflective cup ... I have the bulb in (red looking and shaped like a
> flood light) I have it aimed 4 inches from the cooking
> thermometer. Since it
> clips on, you could build a stand (piece of pipe screwed into a base) and
> attach it to it. You shine it at a small area till the temperature gets up
> to 400 degrees and the powder is cured, then you move it down and
> reposition
> it and repeat ... if you had more lamps ($6 a piece) you could do several
> areas a t once .... it's been on 5-10 mins and it's almost up to
> 300 degrees
> ... here's hoping after about 15 it hits 400!
>
> Bill
>
> oletrucks is devoted to Chevy and GM trucks built between 1941 and 1959
>
oletrucks is devoted to Chevy and GM trucks built between 1941 and 1959
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