David,
Thanks for the detailed response. I bought the float attach kit also so I had
decided to prime all interior surfaces. Sure are a lot of opinions on this
matter. What really clinched it for me was an FAA safety meeting at a local
airport that has a fleet of DC-3's based there. They offered the opportunity to
climb through the interior and when I looked at all the primed surfaces I
decided if it was good enough for the DC-3 with all the years they have been
around, it was good enough for me. (Before I get a lot of response, I'll
acknowledge that the aluminum in the DC-3 was probably not 6061 but I like to
error on the conservative side.)
Either primer system requires a breathing system for spray application. I
looked for breathing system ideas at Sun N Fun but only found commercial
products at a minimum of $350 USD. I had read your previous note on the
Canadian Tire hoods, and not having Canadian Tires in the US, I checked the
price of commercial hoods, about $75 USD. I am a member of a volunteer fire
department so I am going ask if they have any old SCBA hoods around. Your
vacuum motor air supply is a good idea though I talked to one fellow who was
using the smog pump from an old car he had as the supply. Might be a little
quieter.
I didn't plan on putting the parts together wet. Having worked in a production
facility and now supporting an overhaul shop, I know on a production basis it
would be damn near, if not impossible, to assemble on a "wet" basis. I'm with
you in hoping the design margins aren't close enough to require the "adhesive
margin."
A friend gave me an old furnace blower and motor. I just need to be home long
enough to build a paint booth. I'm going to build it out of plastic and suspend
it from the ceiling in the garage. I figure I can pull the booth to the ceiling
to get it out of the way if I need the space.
On your workspace comment, my son swears that I built my house around my, at the
time, planned project. I bought the lot my house is on because I could have a
walk out basement. Then I had double opening doors installed to the outside
world.
Terry
-----Original Message-----
From: David A. Ricker [mailto:
ricker@dbis.ns.ca]
Sent: Thursday, April 20, 2000 11:11 AM
To: (Murphy Rebel Builders List)
Subject: Re: corrosion protection - Dupont Products
Terry
On Elite #583 we are using Dupont Corlar filling wash primer. This is available
in chromate bearing (820R) and non-chromate formulation (810R), we are using the
chromate version. When you use the chromate version they say you do NOT need to
apply a chromic conversion treatment (Alodyne/Iridite). This is a big plus for
us since we do not want the problems associated with disposing with the
hazardous waste from the process. When I looked into it, being above board (and
convincing raw material suppliers to sell you the material in bulk at a
reasonable price) would have required being certified to handle the material and
using approved disposal services (unless it went down the drain but having a
septic system and a well rules that out even if your concience doesn't). Local
service providers were not capable of providing the irridite service to our
satisfaction either. BTW, Alodyne = Iridite, these are trade names for chromic
conversion treatment chemicals, Alodyne is the name you hear around aircraft &
Iridite is what you hear around elelctronic chassis/sheet metal fab shops.
Back to Corlar, this material is used in local aircraft refinishing and float
manufacturing facilities. I suppose they have a good handle on corrosion issues
in this area due to the proximity of the salty Atlantic Ocean....... I first
got a lead on using this material by reading the RV archives. I guess I should
also mention that we are building with the possibility of putting this plane on
floats at some pooint so we wanted to apply some corrosion protection to all of
the internal surfaces and procuring the Poly F product in that quantity was
going to be a royal pain so we went looking for locally sourced alternatives
As for application, the Murphy instructions say you should assemble the parts
wet implying to "glue" the parts together (with the Poly F product), in our case
that was not consistent with our basement assembly area (fumes) so we assemble
after the parts dry with the exception of dipping the rivets. I call on two
reasons for believing this is adequate, first I cannot believe Murphy would
design the structure so close to the edge that the "adhesive" properties of the
paint would make a pass/fail difference on the strength of the structure and the
fact that I spoke to a tech person at Cessna who told me that they assemble
their aircraft "dry" after all the piece parts are alodyne/iridite treated and
painted.
We contacted the Dupont Tech center (Ontario?) to get advice on this. It is
recommended to follow the Corlar with a high solids urethane primer 1020R
(Ochre) or 1044R (Gray), and a Dupont topcoat like Imron. They also said we
should be able to get good advice from their re-sellers like UAP but we felt
speaking to "the horses mouth" would provide the best information. We got the
requisite data sheets (including application instructions and MSDSs from the
local UAP.
These Dupont products are available at your local UAP auto body supply jobber -
off the shelf, no HAZMAT shipping issues.
Dupont is clear on their direction to use a paint "system" from ONE manufacturer
to avoid incompatibility.
Application of all these products must done with a fresh air supply to the
painter since these days just about every paint you will encounter will have
very nasty chemicals like isocyanates (or chromate in typical zinc chromate) in
them. Normal charcoal etc. masks are NOT adequate for these paints. Your fresh
air system does not need to be expensive, ours is just a shop vac located in a
room
outside the painting area to supply air to the painter and an old furnace blower
which exhausts the paint fumes and maintains the shop at a pressure lower than
ambient. This ensures that fumes won't enter the house attached to the workshop
(that is a description of
priorities isn't it!). You will need a hood/visor to pump the air into, we made
one from a Canadian Tire clear visor and some fabric or you can spend more $ for
an official version.
As we did, you should look at the alternatives and satisfy yourself that the
decisions you make are best for your situation. Our choices were made based on
our needs and imposed restrictions and hopefully we have made good ones!
Hope all this is useful,
Dave R.
McClary, Terry (GEAE) wrote:
Dave R.,
Care to share where you got your recommendations on which DuPont products to
use? Did you use a web site, local dealer, or user recommendations to determine
which is the best product for the application and how to apply.
I've bought a quart of the Poly Fiber primer and the associated pre-prime
chemicals. I also talked to the distributors at Sun N Fun about pre-prime
cleaning and primer application. The Poly Fiber factory was very helpful and
fast about providing MSDS sheets and answering questions by telephone, but, I
didn't ask for any of the details you did.
I know a couple of the fellows in my EAA chapter have talked about using DuPont
products on their projects. I decided to stay with the Murphy recommendation
but I haven't started priming. If DuPont supports their products better, maybe
I'll switch before I get started.
Terry
-----Original Message-----
From: David A. Ricker [ mailto:
ricker@dbis.ns.ca <mailto:
ricker@dbis.ns.ca> ]
Sent: Thursday, April 20, 2000 9:44 AM
To: (Murphy Rebel Builders List)
Subject: Re: corrosion protection
Ken, Bob
It looks like something changed (before we got our kit, about March '97). Our
package
says nothing about chromate and a quick call to Poly F confirms that there is no
chromate
in the product. The guy I talked to said they had put in some "miracle"
additive called
"hibosil" or" hiboseal". When pressed on how this worked (as in, does it form a
sacrificial anode like zinc chromate or does it simply improve adhesion) the guy
wouldn't
discuss it. Trade secret. For me that just confirms our decision to deal with
Dupont
who are willing to discuss their products and not give you the PR face.
FWIW, we are using a Dupont etching wash primer recommended for aluminum
(Corlar) which
has the option of chromate or not and is availible at your local auto parts
jobber (no
HAZMAT shipping issues). For the chromate version they specifically say
alodine/irridite
chromic conversion treatments are NOT required.
Hope this helps put more info in the hands of those that can use it.
Dave R.
klehman@albedo.net wrote:
Dave
FWIW my old can says "EP-420 Epoxy Chromate Primer". My brand new can says
simply "EP-420 Epoxy Primer". Sounds like something changed.
Ken
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David A. Ricker P. Eng.
DARTEC Engineering Inc.
Fall River, Nova Scotia
Canada, B2T 1E8
ricker@dbis.ns.ca
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David A. Ricker P. Eng.
DARTEC Engineering Inc.
Fall River, Nova Scotia
Canada, B2T 1E8
ricker@dbis.ns.ca
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