| The
Coil Coating Process
Coil coating is a continuous and highly automated process
for coating metal before fabrication. In one continuous
process, up to 72 inches wide moving up to 700 feet per
minute, a coil of metal is unwound and both the top and
bottom sides are cleaned, chemically treated, primed, oven
cured, top coated, oven cured again, and rewound for shipment.
Even
more specifically, bare coils of metal are placed on an
unwinder or decoiler where the metal is observed for defects.
The metal is then cleaned and chemically treated in preparation
for painting. Brushes can be used to physically remove contaminants
from the sheet, or the metal may be abraded by flap sanders
to further enhance the surface. Pretreatments may be used
to provide the bond between the metal and the coating, in
addition to adding any corrosion resistance. The type of
chemical treatment varies with the type of metal being used.
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After
drying, the strip enters a coating room for a coat of primer usually
on both sides of the sheet. The pickup roll transfers the coating
liquid from the pan to the applicator roll. The liquid is then
pumped into the pan, and then overflows back to the supply reservoir,
where it is remixed and filtered.
The
direction of the rotation of the applicator roll plays a part
in determining the type of coating. Reverse roller coating, when
the applicator roll turns in the opposite direction of the strip,
is used to apply thick coatings. Direct roller coating, turning
in the same direction as the strip, is used for thinner coatings,
0.5 mils or less.
The
paint sheet then enters an oven in which the coating is baked
at high temperatures for 20 to 30 seconds. The strip exits the
oven and is cooled with air and water. A majority of specifications
call for two coats (primer and top coat) on each side of the sheet,
requiring a pass through a second coater room and oven. The fully
painted sheet then exits the second oven and is cooled before
inspection and rewind.
Since
the process allows metals to be finished in one continuous pass,
there is flexibility in how the metal is coated and the types
of coatings. Organics and inorganics, such as polyesters, epoxies,
vinyls, plastisols, acrylics, water-born emulsions, fluorocarbons,
dry lubricants, treatment and primer combinations, can be applied.
Prepainted coils can also be printed, striped and embossed to
create special visual effects.
The
key word in this entire process is control. By its very nature
provides for controls that are virtually impossible to attain
with most other painting processes. Dealing with a flat sheet
allows for mechanical cleaning in addition to the spray cleaning.
The flat sheet also enables excellent control of coating weights
of both the pretreatment and the paint to within a tenth of a
mil or less, depending upon the equipment and the paint system
being applied. Such advantages, along with the economic and environmental
benefits, make coil coating the choice for success.
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