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Powder Paint Additives?

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I was recently at a show and the guy in the next booth was adding Flex and Hardener to his powder paint as an alternative to curing. I wish I'd of had a little more time to talk to him about it but it seemed like one of us was always busy.

 

Has anyone used additives in their powder as an alternative to curing the paint and if so are the results as good? Did it affect the colors much? What are the products called and where would someone get them?

 

Thanks so much!

Johnny

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The additives that you're talking about have been around a long time actually but it won't help with all your colors. What they do is basically cause internal heat sort of like the chemical hand warmers you can buy, low heat over a 12 hour or so duration. From the little I've heard, it only works on epoxy based powders, most of the colors we use are TGIC or polyester and polyester hybrids so I doubt the additives would even be useful on a production scale unless there is a new one out that works with all types of powder and sets up really fast.

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The why of it is because we are trying to cure hundreds of lures some days, sometimes over 1000.

I'm really not interested in using it on my spinnerbaits/buzzbait heads but on my inline spinners and crappie jigs, the lutes that won't be bounced off of the rocks or have a long life expectancy.

Right now we cute in an oven in our shop and not having to load/unload everything could save us a lot of time.

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It' s been quite some time since I saw it but there was a video of a curing system that worked like a conveyor I would think with a little elbow grease and some knowhow one could be made.

 

That's probably the one that Illinois casting uses.  It's not that great of a system since it doesn't really cure the paint.  It used infrared heating elements and the items are only "cured" for a few seconds.

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I've tried using infra red heat to cure my paint and results can vary. I'm not really interested in exploring that type of system any further.

I'll see what I come up with on the flex and hardener for my crappie jig and inline spinner head. I'll post the results when done.

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I'll have to find the contact info for the fly/jig maker that was telling me about using the flex and hardener.

 

He was painting, tying, and packaging jigs in less than an hour from start to finish. Never hung them to cure and everyone that he handed us to look at was cool to the touch. Most of what he was building was smaller Crappie jigs but he did do some large Striper jigs with the same results.

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