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One of our Fly Baby restorers is painting his aircraft with latex house paint.
He's been posting his progress to the Fly Baby mailing list, and is allowing me to repost his messages to my web page: http://www.bowersflybaby.com/tech/latex.html Ron Wanttaja |
#2
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In article ,
Ron Wanttaja wrote: One of our Fly Baby restorers is painting his aircraft with latex house paint. He's been posting his progress to the Fly Baby mailing list, and is allowing me to repost his messages to my web page: http://www.bowersflybaby.com/tech/latex.html Ron Wanttaja I would not expect it to have very good UV protection without using lots of silver! I have never tried to work with latex on even test samples of fabric. It should be interesting to see how it turns our. Isn't latex the basis for the Green River (?) process? |
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"Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message
news ![]() I would not expect it to have very good UV protection without using lots of silver! I have never tried to work with latex on even test samples of fabric. It should be interesting to see how it turns our. Orval......... My first Emeraude was finished with latex and the cover job was twenty years old. (Hangared, of course.) The UV protection comes not from silver but from a coat of black latex under the color coat. The black undercoat may be sanded to smooth and fill the edges of the tapes and seams just like silver. You just have to make sure that the last coat of black completely protects the fabric and is not sanded through anywhere. Rich S. |
#4
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![]() Rich S. wrote: ... The UV protection comes not from silver but from a coat of black latex under the color coat. ... This is an oft repeated canard. For some strange reason, folks simply assume that since black paint blocks visible light, it must also block UV light. By that logic, it would be legitimate to assume that black paoint blocks every other wavelength in the spectrum: xrays, infrared, radio waves, gamma rays, etc. Ok, so if we quit making groundless assumptions, what've we got? Mmmm, how about scientific analysis? A Pietenpol builder by the name of Kirk Huizenga did a series of spectrometry tests on several colors of latex. Turns out that there's nothing special about black, nothing at all. Paint it with whatever color you want, they all protect from UV equally well. His report, the transformed data and the analysis are available (pdf & xls files): http://www.mykitplane.com/Planes/fil....cfm?AlbumID=5 Daniel |
#5
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On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 16:36:02 -0800, "Rich S."
wrote: "Orval Fairbairn" wrote in message news ![]() I would not expect it to have very good UV protection without using lots of silver! I have never tried to work with latex on even test samples of fabric. It should be interesting to see how it turns our. Orval......... My first Emeraude was finished with latex and the cover job was twenty years old. (Hangared, of course.) The UV protection comes not from silver but from a coat of black latex under the color coat. The black undercoat may be sanded to smooth and fill the edges of the tapes and seams just like silver. You just have to make sure that the last coat of black completely protects the fabric and is not sanded through anywhere. Rich S. Titanium Dioxide (white pigment) is also effective for UV blocking. *** Free account sponsored by SecureIX.com *** *** Encrypt your Internet usage with a free VPN account from http://www.SecureIX.com *** |
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wrote in message
ups.com... A Pietenpol builder by the name of Kirk Huizenga did a series of spectrometry tests on several colors of latex. Turns out that there's nothing special about black, nothing at all. Paint it with whatever color you want, they all protect from UV equally well. His report, the transformed data and the analysis are available (pdf & xls files): http://www.mykitplane.com/Planes/fil....cfm?AlbumID=5 It would seem that you are correct. I should have been more specific, as I was offering a single case study as an example. Emeraude N29GL was finished using a black latex undercoat and blue & white color coats. After 20 years, the fabric was still in good condition although the workmanship on the finish was extremely rough. I'm not sure if the builder even cleaned his broom before using it to apply the paint. ![]() Rich S. |
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On Sat, 11 Mar 2006 11:40:43 -0800, Ron Wanttaja
wrote: One of our Fly Baby restorers is painting his aircraft with latex house paint. He's been posting his progress to the Fly Baby mailing list, and is allowing me to repost his messages to my web page: http://www.bowersflybaby.com/tech/latex.html Guaranteed to turn anything white that touches it after a year of two outside. House paint is supposed to be self cleaning, or at least it was. Roger Halstead (K8RI & ARRL life member) (N833R, S# CD-2 Worlds oldest Debonair) www.rogerhalstead.com Ron Wanttaja |
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On Sun, 12 Mar 2006 18:57:07 -0500, "Morgans" wrote:
"Roger" wrote Guaranteed to turn anything white that touches it after a year of two outside. House paint is supposed to be self cleaning, or at least it was. How the latex will perform in the chalking regard, I am unsure of. Of one thing I am sure of, Latex paint has changed much, in the past few years. Paint manufacturers are being "encouraged" to get more and more away from oil paints, with all of their volatile substances, so they have improved latex's quality and durability, greatly. It will be interesting to see how they hold up on planes in the long term. Drew Fidoe, the guy using latex paint on his Fly Baby, started a test with paint samples left outdoors about 4-5 years ago. Nothing he saw from those discouraged him so far. A while back, a local homebuilder was laughed at because he covered his elevators with nurse's uniform fabric from the local sewing-goods store. After 45 years without having to recover them, no one's laughing any more. Ron Wanttaja |
#9
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![]() "Roger" wrote Guaranteed to turn anything white that touches it after a year of two outside. House paint is supposed to be self cleaning, or at least it was. How the latex will perform in the chalking regard, I am unsure of. Of one thing I am sure of, Latex paint has changed much, in the past few years. Paint manufacturers are being "encouraged" to get more and more away from oil paints, with all of their volatile substances, so they have improved latex's quality and durability, greatly. It will be interesting to see how they hold up on planes in the long term. I seem to recall that new car auto makers are now beginning to use paints almost totally lacking in volatile. -- Jim in NC |
#10
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"Roger" wrote in message
... Guaranteed to turn anything white that touches it after a year of two outside. House paint is supposed to be self cleaning, or at least it was. Y'know Roger, that made me remember. While the Emeraude I mentioned was prepped with latex, the color coats were Dupont Dulux car enamel. A mind is a terrible thing to lose. Rich S. |
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