[R-390] Painting Knobs
mdmerz
mdmerz at frontier.com
Mon Aug 12 12:11:59 EDT 2024
Barry, I have absolutely no experience repainting R-390 knobs but….I would guess the uniformity of the surface before repainting is important. Whatever the original surface was, alodine or anodized or not, it was likely uniform. With a paint-worn and wear-worn knob, how to regain uniformity before applying paint? I would guess the best bet is caustic etching or abrasive tumbling, and caustic etching would be my choice. Mechanical abrasion by hand is probably very tedious and haphazard as a final prep but would probably help before etching. Ordinary oven cleaner caustic should work to clean away partial remaining alodine or anodize coating before applying your primer. A little Vaseline on the threads and shaft entry would protect those areas but the length of etch needn’t be long. Since you have a couple of knobs that appear unusual, maybe going back to a uniform surface will help these.
Best regards, Dan
Sent from my iPad Air4
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Sent from my iPad Air4
> On Aug 12, 2024, at 7:14 AM, Barry <n4buq at knology.net> wrote:
>
> As I've mentioned over the past several months, I'm in the process of refinishing the knobs (as well as all the other front-panel parts) for my R390. I stripped, sanded them and used Rust-Oleum Self-Etching primer and painted them with Rust-Oleum enamel.
>
> The Rust-Oleum Self-Etching primer and Rust-Oleum enamel worked very well on the front panel, escutcheon, meter covers and, as far as I know, the large knobs. I had reason to remove the paint (again) on the larger knobs and the paint and primer stuck quite well; however, I've discovered that the primer doesn't seem to stick very well to the smaller knobs.
>
> While working on the smaller knobs, I noticed a small chip in the paint on one of them that exposed the bare metal. I don't know exactly how that chip was made but I think I dropped one of the knobs onto the table top which might have hit it just right. I noticed I could take a sharp putty knife and some of the surrounding paint could be removed all too easily. Another knob had a very small spot where the bare metal was exposed as well.
>
> I decided to dump those two (and a third one that had some small defects in the top coat) into a can with acetone and, after a short soak, I pulled them out. The paint had wrinkled quite well and was very easy to remove (it virtually fell off); however, the primer also came off very easily which was different than some of the other pieces I'd painted. In fact, the primer and paint stuck very well to each other but the entire paint/primer fell away from the metal.
>
> I think those knobs are die-cast aluminum so I can't explain how/why the primer wouldn't have stuck to those the same way as the other aluminum parts but I just don't know.
>
> Anyone have a similar experience and, perhaps, have a suggestion for a better primer? I think the factory used conversion (Alodine?) process on most all of the aluminum parts and that would probably be a "best" solution. I had some parts done that way many years ago around here but it was pretty expensive and I'm not sure it's even still an option around here.
>
> Thanks,
> Barry - N4BUQ
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