Thanks.
I used it on a gate back in the 80s. Haven't had to do anything to it
since and it still looks great.
Harry K
Krylon and Rustoleum have been around forever, but the Krylon anti-
rust came years after Rustoleum. Performance might be a standoff, but
I like Krylon for the nice finish on most projects and Rustoleum seems
to take the weather beatinga little better. Flip a coin, I suppose!
Joe
I'd probably go with the Rustoleum. However with primer with bush
marks, the spray paint may not hide the brush marks.
Look at Hammerite paint. The hammered texture looks great on wrought
iron and hides a multitude of sins. The texture also makes it less
noticeable when you have to touch it up. And it comes in spray cans.
R
Yes. Just spray it on in several light coats so it does not drip and run.
It will last a long time and look nice.
Steve
Preval.
http://www.prevalspraygun.com/
There are also refillable metal bottles that use compressed air as the
propellant. They're not as cheap though.
R
Second, rattle cans are an expensive way to buy paint.
Third a sprayed on finish is a lot thinner paint film than a brushed on
finish so it will not last as long.
I think I would use a brush, and if you were worried about brush strokes.
add Penetrol to your paint.
--
Roger Shoaf
If you are not part of the solution, you are not dissolved in the solvent.
"al" <albo...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1173279816.5...@j27g2000cwj.googlegroups.com...
Spray can work requires multiple coats just to cover. Most spray
paint does not have the quality or longevity of "real" paint. You
must thin enamel quite a bit to spray with your own spray gun.
Penetrol allows brush work to flow out the brush marks. There is
a product for latex enamel, I think it is called Flowtrol.
______________________________
Keep the whole world singing . . . .
DanG (remove the sevens)
dgri...@7cox.net
"al" <albo...@yahoo.com> wrote in message
news:1173279816.5...@j27g2000cwj.googlegroups.com...
Floetrol. Stupid name, good product.
R
>
>Those are really for paint you can't find in a spray can like some
>custom mixed auto colors. I had to use them for interior paint on some
>cars I restored before I got a real touch up gun. If you have "air" a
>gun is the way to go.
What do you use to thin auto paint?
I just got my car painted with a color not used by the automakers
since 1979. And I got 5 oz. of spare paint. They call it "silver
effect" where effect means something like metalllic. It will need
thinning, won't it?
I would ask at the body shop that painted your car. Often touch up paint is
applied with a small brush. If you needed to thin the paint to spray it,
they would probably be happy to give you a little bit of thinner of the
correct kind to do the job.
> Look at Hammeritepaint. The hammered texture looks great onwrought
> iron and hides a multitude of sins. The texture also makes it less
> noticeable when you have to touch it up. And it comes inspraycans.
The Hammerite sounded like a real good idea, but I contacted the
manufacturer regarding use on oil primer and this was their response,
just for anyone's information who may also consider using it:
"Since Hammerite Rust Cap is Xylene based and you have a solvent based
primer on the surface, I recommend you topcoat with a water based
primer first. The solvents in the Hammerite will lift off the oil
based primer."