Abby’s Guide > Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) > Discussions > Should I paint the wheel Axle - Honda HS
Outdoor Power Equipment (Lawn Mowers, Snow Blowers, Chain Saws and more) Discussions |
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chefwong
Joined: Dec 18, 2004
Points: 175
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Re: Should I paint the wheel Axle - Honda HS
Reply #4 Nov 11, 2010 11:46 am |
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Correct, the shaft is the only thing that has surface rust. I see some areas with clean steel but it does have surface rust. Kinda like the top of a tablesaw table that was not waxed and left alone... The bucket, augers, etc is all clean. Some galvanic reaction on the chute control, Auger Transmission but other than that, she's pretty clean. I need to break the wheels off to see how much play I have if I was to sand, prime and then paint... When I say seal, I use a product called weatherPruf, made by the same makes of Kroil. It's kinda like a spraying clearcoat that dries clear/hard. It can be removed with mineral spirits. I like this more than Fluidfild which does not dry to a dry touch. I've used Weatherpruf on my condensor housings, etc and sofar it's kept rust atbay
This message was modified Nov 11, 2010 by chefwong
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Underdog
Joined: Oct 18, 2008
Points: 332
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Re: Should I paint the wheel Axle - Honda HS
Reply #5 Nov 11, 2010 12:23 pm |
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Weatherpruf sounds like an interesting product. From the web site: "Weatherpruf Clear Rust Preventative - 1 Year Protection Tough, clear weatherproof coating. A single coat provides 1 year of rust and corrosion protection in outdoor applications. Transparent coating will not harm metals, and may be applied over paint. Easily removed with mineral spirits, or may be painted over without additional preparations needed."
Do you find that you get more than the "1 year" of protection or do you re-apply annually? I might try it on my tablesaw that get left out in the garage over the winter.
This message was modified Nov 11, 2010 by Underdog
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chefwong
Joined: Dec 18, 2004
Points: 175
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Re: Should I paint the wheel Axle - Honda HS
Reply #6 Nov 11, 2010 12:31 pm |
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I just normally reapply 1X a year. However, on a TS, will it be used during that time. Since it's outdoor grade stuff, I just spay on heavy, brushback and let it dry. I don't go thin and brush smooth. There are areas where it's *uneven* but it's a heavy coating it. Still transparent - kinda like if you were to spray heavy paint and not nice thin even coats. For the tablesaw, I would just spritz and then brush it out for a light coat/layer. Unless if you don't intend to touch it, I'd go heavy coating. Mineral spirits will bring it back to bare metal. I went heavy so you can at least see what I mean by *uneven heavy* coating... I fill the liquid in my spray can, spritz and just do a quick backbrush. A light spritz with backbrush will generate a light even coat. I went heavy....with a quick backbrush to level it off. Hard to capture due to it being clear but hopefully u get the gist.
This message was modified Nov 11, 2010 by chefwong
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