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Rattlecan Duracoat

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https://forums.accuratereloading.com/eve/forums/a/tpc/f/9411043/m/1281090922

07 February 2017, 20:14
richj
Rattlecan Duracoat
Buddy is trying a can of Duracoat on an SPS M700.
What you see took a whole can.




08 February 2017, 05:58
Clayman
Pretty cool. I have a beater slug gun I coated last year on a whim. I am not lying when I say the results have been really impressive! Massive and fastidious surface prep are an absolute must, but I was able to coat the entire slug gun, a Ruger 22/45, some other random gun parts, and a machete blade with an entire can. Probably two coats on everything, too. Hey, for the $30 it costs, it's hard to go wrong.


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08 February 2017, 06:17
richj
more


08 February 2017, 06:36
dpcd
Try Brownells Alumihyde; it is air cure and takes a few days to cure but it is pretty durable for a low cost.
08 February 2017, 07:16
lee440
Richj, what preps do you use on the scope tube, aluminum, I presume, to promote adhesion?


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08 February 2017, 07:56
richj
Wet Sanded everything. The Leupold finish is very tough. There were a few spots on the stock that weren't perfect. My buddy is OCD, he went back and sanded the stock and metal for another coat.

He runs a collision shop and is a very good painter.
08 February 2017, 11:32
georgeld
Hijack:

DCPD:
How does the alumihyde stuff work on steel?
I have a can, but, used it on aluminum and haven't tried it on steel.

Thanks,
George


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08 February 2017, 15:55
leemar28
Alumihyde will take very well to steel. Bead blast it, or rough it up with sanding. Have done several rifles with it. It can take a beating, and stands up to aggressive bore cleaners as well. Takes about a week of 90 degrees temp to fully cure. Good stuff !!


Hang on TITE !!
08 February 2017, 16:22
richj
I'm 90% sure the scope is alumihyde. I did it many years ago.




08 February 2017, 20:14
impala#03
Duracoat is tough stuff when applied properly. You should let it cure for a couple of weeks if possible.
08 February 2017, 20:16
dpcd
I don't know why they are called alumihyde because of course, all these products are just paint; and will stick to any properly prepared surface, steel, wood, aluminum. Trick is to get the surface oil free and as rough as you can. Blasting with aluminum oxide is best. The bake on types can be use immediately whilst the air dry ones take days to cure,, as stated above. I have used most all of them from the old Gun Coat, to Duracoat, Cerakote, Alumihyde one and two.
17 February 2017, 02:55
richj
Done. All duracoat paint 2 colors. theres a lot going on in there.


and redone