johnieG
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« Reply #1 on: September 02, 2006, 09:52:59 pm » |
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Hey Jasi' I can't recall who sprayed the liner with what, but I think it may have been rust conversion product like P.O.R. chassis paint, ( a urathane enamel) but at this point I'm just guessing, here's what I've tried, I'm always up for experimenting with new ideas to help restore machines! yea, that Cavalier 22 is a lot of metal to work with, here's my 2-cents worth anyhow..
if the holes are truly just pinhole size, powder coating will seal them, but this size of a liner/tub wouldn't be a do it yourself job, I've tried hot dip galvanizing on a pin-hole riddled quick cold standard chest cooler chassis, It filled all if the holes & pitted areas with a beautiful coating of thick galvanized zinc, but there was some warpage of the side panels, I wouldn't recomend it for the thiner sheet metal of a tub/liner, another option which I've had some sucess is taking the liner to a truck-bed spray on liner shop, it comes in quite few colors, ( I used silver of course) it's catalized epoxy, so it dries hard but flexable, & it's fairly inexpensive at about $75 to "line" a standard size tub,
I've also had liners made at a local sheet metal shop , they charged a minimum of $125 to bend a new liner & seal it so that its able to hold water, you may have seen a custom stainless liner for a G.E. wet cooler I've posted, it's just knock down beautiful, but it layed the owner back a nice $310.00 to fabricate it... lot's of choices...
Lastly I've seen a hot-metal spray that uses a hot gas/M.I.G technique that actually sprays a coating of molten zinc ( just like spray paint) onto metal substrates) this allows for actually building up low areas & dents & even closing tears & gaps with solid zinc (metal bondo!) I've seen it demo'd on a broken sheet metal die-punch, pretty slick, but I bet it's not cheap
if it were me & it is a dry chest cooler, I'd go for the truck bed liner spray again, I'm in the process of getting a Westinghouse WC-60MD Select-a matic restored and I have the same problem, lots of scale-rust & pinholes, but the liner is to intricate to just have my sheet metal man bend one up ( too many special little nooks & crannies & brackets for attaching the vending racks & mech.) so I'm going to have it bed-linered to seal it and then go over it with hammertone paint for a more "metalic" look...
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