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mark poulson

Powder Coat Burning

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I just coated 48 football heads.  24 brown, and 24 green pumpkin with green and purple flake.

I used Protec powder paint, and .15 flake from my soft plastic flakes.

I cured them in my toaster over for 30 minutes at 350 degrees.

Four of the green pumpkin heads, the ones closest to one of the heating elements, burnt to a brownish green and were very dull.  The four brown heads in the same position were fine.

So, my question is, do different colors of powder paint need to be cured at different temps.?

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I just coated 48 football heads.  24 brown, and 24 green pumpkin with green and purple flake.

I used Protec powder paint, and .15 flake from my soft plastic flakes.

I cured them in my toaster over for 30 minutes at 350 degrees.

Four of the green pumpkin heads, the ones closest to one of the heating elements, burnt to a brownish green and were very dull.  The four brown heads in the same position were fine.

So, my question is, do different colors of powder paint need to be cured at different temps.?

15 minutes @ 350 degrees( assuming the over was 350 when you put the jigs in) is enough time to cook the powder paint

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I do the same as smallmouthaholic. Also like mentioned maybe your oven was hotter than 350 degrees and burnt the paint and or maybe it had something to do with the glitter. All glitter will not work with powder paint, as it can't sustain the prolonged heat temp. JMO.

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Checking the thermostat with an oven thermometer is the way to go, I check mine every 6 months. I know there is dofferent times for different colors but I've always used 15 minutes at 350 degrees no matter what the color and they come out fine. I throw them on the concrete floor and they don't chip but I know it takes 4 minutes for my toaster over to hit 350 degrees so I put my jigs in for 19 minutes, and at the 4 minute mark the oven is at 350 and that is when my time begins.

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Just to clarify, I cured 48 jigs, and the only four that had a problem were the four green pumpkin jigs closest to one of the heating element.  The four brown jigs in the same position had no problem.

The other 44 jigs, including the ones with green and purple flake, were fine.

I load them, close the door, and then set the heat and timer for 30 minutes.

I'm guessing the green pumpkin powder is less heat tolerant, and that the four that were closer to the heating element just got overheated.

I'll just be sure to keep them farther away from the heating element for the next batch.

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I have the metal plate the toaster oven comes with in there over the heating elements....do you guys still have them in there? I would not like my jigs sitting right over the element w/o it being there. Then again, I guess that would depend on how big of a jig your making. Some of my larger saltwater ones would come to close to it.

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