I have a question about high temp paint. I'll be buying an exhaust soon, and it needs some new high temp paint on the piping. I'm guessing the 1000* paint would work just fine, but how many coats would be good?
-Matt
-Matt
Thanks for the link, now I have to decide either black or silver.Ric said:I used this on my turbine housing and downpipe. Still looks like brand new after 4 months.
http://www.eastwoodco.com/jump.jsp?itemID=744&itemType=PRODUCT
I'll be using it on a catback, so it should work the same? I was thinking the aerosol would be alot easier to use though.Rajunz said:I used this one, the brush on one and it works awesome. It won't last directly on the exhaust manifold but will hold on the heat shields. Won't last forever on the turbo outlet, but pretty much every other part of the exhaust will hold forever. The trick is to cure it. When you start the car you will smell paint cooking, turn the car off and let it cool. Once cooled, start it up and shut it off when you start to smell thepaint cooking. Repeat until the smell goes away and it will last forever pretty much.
I planned on using some scotch brite + degreaser to clean the surface, should this work?IJ. said:Matt: Surface prep is KING for doing this, it needs to be clean enough to eat off as even the oil in your skin will make a difference.
GotToyota? said:I planned on using some scotch brite + degreaser to clean the surface, should this work?
-Matt
I dunno where I could get it sandblasted. This is for a catback, not the muffler, just the piping for it.adampecush said:i would personally sand blast the surface
Yes that will work, and the brush on is really mess free, there is no overspray to worry about plus it goes on slicker and thicker.GotToyota? said:I planned on using some scotch brite + degreaser to clean the surface, should this work?
-Matt