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#1
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I was working with an A&P while he did a pre-purchase for me.
He looked at the inside and remarked that 'red oxide primer is a plus". Can someone elaborate? what's it better than?- Mike |
#2
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mhorowit wrote:
I was working with an A&P while he did a pre-purchase for me. He looked at the inside and remarked that 'red oxide primer is a plus". Can someone elaborate? what's it better than?- Mike Red oxide primer on what? On steel, its a plus. It's kind of "pre-rust", and helps to protect steel parts from further corrosion, to a limited extent. On aluminum (or magnesium, God forbid)it will promote corrosion (do a Web search on the galvanic series), and is a definite no-no. Rip |
#3
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On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 00:13:25 GMT, Rip
wrote: mhorowit wrote: I was working with an A&P while he did a pre-purchase for me. He looked at the inside and remarked that 'red oxide primer is a plus". Can someone elaborate? what's it better than?- Mike Red oxide primer on what? On steel, its a plus. It's kind of "pre-rust", and helps to protect steel parts from further corrosion, to a limited extent. On aluminum (or magnesium, God forbid)it will promote corrosion (do a Web search on the galvanic series), and is a definite no-no. Rip Rip - 4130 - Mike |
#4
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I've seen red oxide on aluminum and wondered wth put it on there.
Zinc chromate is the aircraft builder's and owner's best bet for aluminum, magnesium, or chromoly. If I were welding up a fuselage of 4130, I'd powdercoat it. The old ones I see which are well-preserved are painted with zinc chromate and then injected with boiled linseed oil. I agree with this writer: http://www.paintcenter.org/rj/feb05d.cfm |
#5
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Michael Horowitz wrote:
On Fri, 18 Nov 2005 00:13:25 GMT, Rip wrote: mhorowit wrote: I was working with an A&P while he did a pre-purchase for me. He looked at the inside and remarked that 'red oxide primer is a plus". Can someone elaborate? what's it better than?- Mike Red oxide primer on what? On steel, its a plus. It's kind of "pre-rust", and helps to protect steel parts from further corrosion, to a limited extent. On aluminum (or magnesium, God forbid)it will promote corrosion (do a Web search on the galvanic series), and is a definite no-no. Rip Rip - 4130 - Mike 4130, no harm, no foul. Rip |
#6
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JLS - powdercoating. I've seen several comments discouraging use of
powdercoating as it hides cracks.YMMV - Mike |
#7
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![]() "mhorowit" wrote in message oups.com... JLS - powdercoating. I've seen several comments discouraging use of powdercoating as it hides cracks.YMMV - Mike Depends. Here in the land of over-regulation, powdercoating isn't allowed unless it can be proved to crack when the surface of the underlying material cracks. Having tested several types, I'm pretty much convinced that the hard polyester powder coats are fine. So are our CAA, who permit them on aircraft structures, engine mounts etc. The nylon ones definitely aren't OK though. I'm pretty sure that cheap nylon podercoat is what's used on domestic garden goods, the sort where rust bubbles up under the coat after a few years. |
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