Technically Speaking: Address Potential Part Failure NOW
Posted on Saturday, December 1, 2012
Welcome to my inaugural
column of Technically Speaking.
In each issue of Powder Coated
Tough, you will find me, here,
offering tech service know-how to
our readers.
One question I often hear is:
What is going to happen to my
part after it has been coated? And
why should the coater I choose
care?
This month’s topic is often a
neglected issue until it’s too late.
In the world of coating parts
for others, the coater tends to
focus on the part while it is in
their hands, with an emphasis
on proper pretreatment, powder
application, curing, and careful
packaging for shipping. Then,
sometimes after six months to a
year passes, an angry customer returns
with news of coating failure
out in the field. The substrate is
rusting through the coating, the
coating is coming off in sheets,
and the customer is looking at you
for answers.
You, the coater, look at your
daily production logs on the dates
that you coated the parts. Everything
is in order. So you ask the
customer to see the failure. They
produce a picture of the part in
the field. After carefully scanning
the picture of the part looking
for clues to the problem, you see
it. The part is bolted to a cement
pad. The corrosion starts from the
bolted area and creeps under the
coating on the part. This creepage
then leads to more exposed substrate,
which causes more creepage
and more corrosion.
So, you ask the customer, “Did
the part get cut, drilled, or bolted
after the coating was applied?”
After all, bolting a part can create
tremendous pressure on the
coated part and cause the coating
to chip in the bolted area. The answer,
of course, is yes. Then you
ask how the [cut, drilled, or] bolted
area was treated, because this
exposes the substrate to the environment.
The look of confusion
and then anger on the customer’s
face tells you that the bolted area
was not treated (which, you of
course had already surmised).
You also mention that since any
treatment in the field after powder
coating is inferior to the original
powder coating that regular maintenance
of the cut, drilled, bolted
area also is required. Additionally,
to ensure field life of the part, spot
inspection of the affected areas
every 3 to 6 months with reapplication
of any said treatment will
be needed for the rest of the part’s
life out in the field.
Powder coating is an excellent
protective coating from the environment.
But once the protective
coating is cut, drilled, or bolted
then you have an entry point for
field failure. Now many may say
that the coater is not responsible
for anything that happens outside
of the coater’s control. I tend to
agree, but the coating community
needs to be better than that. Let’s
start by having written documents
on what kind of performance is
expected of the coated parts. This
needs to include a provision about
the need to treat and maintain
areas of the substrate that get
exposed during installation of
the part. By discussing this issue
before an item is even coated helps
everyone to make certain that the
coated part will last in its environment
for the life that the customer
is expecting. This will then let
the protective coating work to its
fullest potential.
Powder coatings are an excellent
protective coating when all
potential failure areas are addressed
early and dealt with in
the proper manner. Educate your
customers and your customers
will be happier with the field life
of their coated parts.
Mike Wittenhagen is service technician
at PCI. He can be reached via email at
mwitten@powdercoating.org.