Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Lanterns, stoves, etc... anything old!

Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Postby jeporter25 » Tue Jun 12, 2012 9:38 am

The oven was taken so i had to do something :twisted:
IMG_20120612_073711.jpg
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Re: Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Postby SLUG36 » Tue Jun 12, 2012 1:04 pm

as long as you rotated it so it could be heated all the way around. Might mave worked better if you elevated the stove even with the globes.
Making big pieces of wood into the wrong size..... for over 30 years....
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Re: Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Postby jeporter25 » Tue Jun 12, 2012 7:21 pm

actually i put another on the front side. I put it on the bench just for the pic.
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Re: Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Postby campmaster-k » Tue Jun 12, 2012 10:03 pm

Great pic keep them coming!
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Re: Baking the Primer onto the 425 poison oak stove

Postby doug hodder » Thu Jun 14, 2012 9:48 pm

If it's in the winter and I've got a fire going in the shop, I'll dangle it over the stove till it cures, in the summer...I just shoot it and let it cure on it's own, especially a primer as I scuff them prior to shooting any paint on top. Most of the paints I use flash off pretty quickly. An oil based paint however will take a bit longer so is more prone to bugs and dust in it. Some of the VHT paints also say to bake, but I've never heat cured any of them and they hold up fine.

As a side note...I made up some little pyramids of wood that sit under the stove and poke through the holes in the bottom. I spray the bottom first...then set the stove on the pieces and can spray the rest of the stove. That way it's all done in 1 shot. Just what I do. Doug
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