stu_stumble wrote:...
1. Can I just use "The MIX" to cover the entire outside of the trailer and then paint? ....
John61CT wrote:I'm looking at a moisture-cured polyurethane aluminum filled paint called Aluthane....
tony.latham wrote:... Use a good oil-based enamel....
* I looked at using Aluthane, in an older thread, started 1/27/12
http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=21&t=48466, but after some discussion, and not wanting to experiment using $100 per gallon Aluthane, I switched to using oil-based enamels over the "mix" and pure polyurethane base coats.
* Starting with 25% poly to 75% paint thinner, then progressing to pure polyurethane, the "mix" formed such a good base for my Tractor Supply-sourced tractor enamel (MF grey), and silo paints (aluminum), that I have been happy with the results for 7 years since I painted the trailer. I did all the poly/mix base coat work in 110 degree temperatures/direct sunlight in one afternoon, and followed that a week later, with the topcoats (2-3 coats, as soon as they flashed-over), under similar circumstances (the poly base coats dried in a 80-100 degree sealed shed for a week, to fully cure, first).
* Other than touching up a couple of abraded spots (from incidental contact in a crowded garage), and re-doing the hatch & front slope with more aluminum a year later (didn't like the brush marks/loose fibers, from the lousy brush I had used), the poly & paint has withstood years of use with better results than I had expected. I fully anticipated having to re-coat the exterior by now (with Durabak or Monstaliner), but I think the Tractor Supply paints will outlast me, instead.
* I did a rushed imitation of the poly/paint method I used for the trailer, when I made plywood bed covers for my pickup, earlier this year
http://www.tnttt.com/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=71791. I used cheaper, lower quality wood, only used half the coats of "mix", polyurethane, and aluminum paint (Rustoleum this time), but the results were pretty good, anyhow. At least over this hot summer, so far. But, in my opinion, using oil-based enamels over the "mix" and pure polyurethane base coats, is an excellent way to make plywood withstand the weather, at least in my neck of the woods.
*
Note, about exposure to the elements: the trailer is in a covered garage bay 90%+ of the time, though the temperatures still range from 10F -110+F in there; the plywood bed covers are exposed to everything, being outside, in direct sun and rain, with exposure to wind-blown detritus (includes hail, oak tree debris-pollen, leaves. acorns, twigs, branches, sap).