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Letter 18034
Powder Coat Adhesion Problem - Steel
Flanges/Tube [Ohio]
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I was hoping you could provide some advice on an issue we are
having. I am a M.E. at a tube fabricator. We are currently
manufacturing a new axle, which is a straight tube with two end
flanges welded on the ends. After weld, we run through a standard
phosphate system and then powder coat. Our bake time is 35-45 minutes
at a temp. of 400 degrees. We perform an MEK rub and cross-hatch
test. The only area that these tests fail are on the inside faces of
both flanges. The paint adheres on the outside faces of the flanges,
the tube, and the bracket and gusset welded on the tube. Yet, the
paint is chipping and not adhering to the inside faces of the
flanges. We have tried longer bake times, lighter coating (1-2 mils)
and different pre-treat processes. Does anyone have any ideas on what
we are doing wrong or what we can try to fix this problem?
Thanks,
Keith Malone
- Oberlin, OH
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Hi Keith,
Are your flanges water-break-free after cleaning? If not, then
that is the likely cause of your adhesion problem. Are all of the
pretreatment tanks being run within specification? Are the rinse
tanks in the pretreatment line being overflowed adequately and being
dumped regularly? Problems in these areas of the line can result in
adhesion problems.
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Hi Keith,
If the coating in these areas is failing a MEK test it is not
curing.
What type of oven do you have? If you are curing in an IR oven the
inside edges may be being shadowed from the IR hence not curing
properly. I would suggest running a Datapac or similar oven
temperature profile equipment through your oven, attaching probes all
along the axle especially on the inside edges of your flanges.
Adhesion is also connected to cure but another possibility is the
residue from the weld. You must ensure this is totally removed before
phosphating and application.
Hope this helps,
Drew Devlin
- North Lincolnshire
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It seems that higher mass areas of the substrate are not curing,
thus an infra-red booster may be advisable providing that your
pretreatment is operating properly.
Synthetic lubricants may also cause problems proper temperature of
the pretreatment process may be required (over 150F degrees) to
provide a water break free surface.
Steve Mossige
- Dallas, Texas
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It would seem to me that you have "oil burn" which is common after
welding. Standard phosphate will not usually remove this. While I
understand that you may normally be running welded components which
don't exhibit the same problems it may simply be that the area in
question is "shielded" from your washer nozzles.
You could try washing these areas by hand to see if this works. The
next step is to have the part pickled to remove the burnt in/hardened
oil.
Tom Whitesides
- Tupelo, MS, USA
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