Collaborative Effort Resolves Masking Issue
Posted on Friday, March 1, 2013
By Sharon Spielman
Several vendors working
together was key in coming up
with a masking plug that would
reduce the paint-in-thread
problem that a major
agricultural OEM
was having.
When a major agricultural
equipment manufacturer was
having issues with powder coating
and paint getting into the threads of
their finished parts, they assembled
a team of its suppliers, process control
engineers and masking companies
to find a solution.
Among the masking companies
involved, was Engineered Products
and Services (EPSI) According
to Todd Schuh, a senior design
engineer at EPSI, “After the manufacturer
proposed the problem, it
wasn’t very long until we found a
solution—less than a few weeks.”
The masking company dialed in the
requirements and used the OEM’s
own research to find out what the
exact needs were. “The manufacturer
was trying to find what worked
across the board for them, which
was the most difficult thing—to
see what would work with all their
suppliers and find something that
everyone agreed upon. They expected
a lot of work on their vendor
side to help solve the problem. They
wanted to know where to control
the paint, and so they really relied
on their vendor base to help them
make some of the final decisions,”
Schuh says.
Because EPSI did its homework
first, the final solution did not take
long to perfect. Schuh reveals that
there were two different version of
the masking plug. “The first version
worked; and then we made some
improvements with color and tip,
speeding up the customer’s process
by allowing them to identify the tip
by color. And even if it got painted
over, the user could decipher the
correct tip by shape. Then there
were material specs, we dialed that
in as well to find the material. That
was probably the biggest jump from
the first version to the final version,”
he says.
The masking plugs are made
from silicone. Heat resistance is up
to 600°F short-term, but according
to Schuh, the main operational
range is about 450 degrees F.
Properly installing and removing
the plugs is important for the
success of the finished product
Schuh concludes, “Finally, it was a
great collaboration of all the vendors
involved, and a lot of hard work. A
ton of effort was put in; they actually
took time to make plates with
roughly 100 walnuts on it, to test
it, to figure out statistically how
efficient it would work.” He continues,
“They went above and beyond
testing. As competitors of each other,
it was very interesting to see how
well they worked together to give us
input. We would be on conference
calls with 10 competing vendors,
blending their concerns and figuring
out a solution. That was an
interesting process."
Sharon Spielman is editor of Powder
Coated Tough magazine. She can be
reached via email at
sspielman@powdercoating.org.
Visit EPSI on the web at www.epsi.com.