The bare steel is exposed and getting slightly rusted and the peeling
paint trail is widening. Its appearance mildly annoys me every time I
see it.
Anone know what paint(s) are suitable for brushing over the worn area to
improve appearances? Perhaps one of those little brush top bottles of
white appliance touch up paint would do the trick.
I'm thinking that because the paint is right up against a metal surface
it probably can't absorb much of the microwave energy and get heated anyway.
Thanks guys,
Jeff
--
Jeffry Wisnia
(W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE)
The speed of light is 1.8*10^12 furlongs per fortnight.
> Our kitchen's GE microwave oven is still working fine, but the white
> paint on the oven floor is cracked and peeling off where the rollers on
> the round three wheeled carriage under the rotating glass dish have been
> rolling over it for a few years now.
>
> The bare steel is exposed and getting slightly rusted and the peeling
> paint trail is widening. Its appearance mildly annoys me every time I
> see it.
>
> Anone know what paint(s) are suitable for brushing over the worn area to
> improve appearances? Perhaps one of those little brush top bottles of
> white appliance touch up paint would do the trick.
>
> I'm thinking that because the paint is right up against a metal surface
> it probably can't absorb much of the microwave energy and get heated anyway.
>
> Thanks guys,
>
> Jeff
I'd say if the OEMs coating (powder coating? baked on enamel?) there's
not much chance you'll be successful fixing it for any length of time.
If it weren't for those wheels, maybe. A mag-lev rotary table conversion
kit might help.
White touch-up appliance paint should work. You might try lubricating the
wheels with just a touch of powdered Teflon to minimize future wear.
Skip the paint and get some thin UHMW poly sheet to cut a ring of and
glue down as a track for the rollers.
Thanks. That was the first thing I'd thought of, but the "track" is
depressed into the oven bottom and has sloping sides, which are also
missing some paint now, but maybe a ring of poly sheet as you siggest
will take care of the flat surface the wheels roll on and some white
paint will replace what's flaked off the sloping sides.
I think I'll try that..
>
>Our kitchen's GE microwave oven is still working fine, but the white
>paint on the oven floor is cracked and peeling off where the rollers on
>the round three wheeled carriage under the rotating glass dish have been
>rolling over it for a few years now.
>
>The bare steel is exposed and getting slightly rusted and the peeling
>paint trail is widening. Its appearance mildly annoys me every time I
>see it.
>
>Anone know what paint(s) are suitable for brushing over the worn area to
>improve appearances? Perhaps one of those little brush top bottles of
>white appliance touch up paint would do the trick.
>
>I'm thinking that because the paint is right up against a metal surface
>it probably can't absorb much of the microwave energy and get heated anyway.
>
>Thanks guys,
>
>Jeff
I'd wipe the rusted area with a little cooking oil or shortening and
forget about repair work. Most of my appliances working over 15
years look a little worn too (cooktops, dishwasher racks, dented sink,
etc), but glad they still work fine. Glad Martha S. doesn't live
here.
Your prolly right, I should heed the adage, "Pretty is as pretty does."
The oil would cook, and possibly burn? Time for a new micro? Don't
know if deep rust will
let microwaves leak, or what hazard that would pose, but they are darn
cheap nowadays.
Don't know how the oil film would hold up. Only a rust through would let
microwaves out. Cheap for a basic unit, not so cheap if used as an
excuse to upgrade to an Advantium or similar. Of course the old unit
could migrate to the workshop for reheating coffee while working on a
project.
>Don't know how the oil film would hold up. Only a rust through would let
>microwaves out. Cheap for a basic unit, not so cheap if used as an
>excuse to upgrade to an Advantium or similar. Of course the old unit
>could migrate to the workshop for reheating coffee while working on a
>project.
>
>
I started a fire in my microwave once, thawing a loaf of bread and had
forgotten to take off the
metal twist tie. My son asked, "What's burning?" I said, "What do you
mean?" He pointed at
the microwave and the flaming bread wrapper. Very small amount of
flame, and no damage done.
So, that leads me to ask about exposed metal inside the mw.....dangerous?
Not if used properly. In the early days of microwave ovens they simply
said not to use metal in the microwave, assuming (possibly correctly for
the time) that consumers were not sophisticated enough to understand the
actual restrictions on using metal in a microwave. More recent microwave
oven user manuals and microwave cookbooks give the real instructions,
which mostly amount to: No sharp points and not too close to the oven
walls. I readily use stainless bowls in the microwave and leave spoons
in containers in the microwave without issues. Microwave instructions
and cookbooks also tell you to use aluminum foil to shield thin areas on
foods from overcooking. Your metal twist tie violated the "no sharp
points" rule, concentrated the energy and caused arcing which started
your fire.
Jeff-
Phisherman's suggestion of wiping with cooking oil is a good one.
Been using that technique to keep my 1984 Panasonic countertop
microwave from rusting at the rotary tray wheel path.
I clean under the rotating tray every so often. The paint is only
gone on the wheel path so I can only see it when the tray is out.
I was thinking about painting but figured the paint wouldn't hold up,
plus the light oil rub has prevented any rust damage.
cheers
Bob