What kind of crazy physics do we think happened here?
I sunk neo magnets into the cab. They're covered in epoxy & spot putty and imperceptible to the eye or touch. Spraying the cabs with a fresh can of Rust-Oleum high build primer created these funny rings.
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Comments
is there any metal oxides in the paint ingredients or the sandpaper you used?
Cool least you’ll know where the magnets are for the grill.😆
https://www.jfcomponents.com/
I would guess some amount of titanium dioxide since it's the most common white pigment? But that's not magnetic.
My theory is that the spraying of the aerosol created a static charge.
Well that is not too far off what happens when spraying powdercoat isn't it?
First problem.... Rust-Oleum. Just saying
It's... primer. I'm probably going to sand 1/3 of it off anyway. The bar is low.
This IS making me a bit concerned that I'm going to have to roll and not spray my top coat.
Tell your kids about the scientific method.
So I did some tests, and @Steve_Lee, you are probably on to something. Either some metal, or some plastic / vinyl additive that generates static electricity. Or @PWRRYD is right, and the problem is in the coating manufacturer. ;-)
First of all, the cabinets were painted under midday sun, 56F, with 39% RH. A tad windy at 6-8mph, (my whole cab will need a fine grit knockdown because it feels a bit...flocked). My tests were done in my garage @ 48F / 49% RH. I don't think it's a temp thing, and probably not an RH thing.
I grabbed the glue stick and attached a 10mm x 4mm neo magnet to the back of a clean, new, note card. A shame they were all colored, so I couldn't use the moment to confirm my top coat color. But I digress. I sprayed one with the primer, and one with the intended top coat. The ring showed up heavily on the primer...but still slightly on the top coat. Hmm, okay. Darn.
Then I realized that maybe my glue stick application was perhaps an unnecessary variable. Was it soaking into the paper? Or perhaps I compressed the paper fibers with my greasy ape fingers as I was adhering the magnet.
So I did it again without the glue, because, hey, gravity does a good job of keeping the paper on top, and any small air gap shouldn't be an impediment to strong-ass little magnets.
Does not appear to be visible in the top coat sample, so that gives me hope. But something in that primer is definitely incompatible with magnetic fields.
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Maybe you can pre-separate the component by spraying through a bucking magnet O :
There may be a ferrous component in the primer pigment.
I've had that problem with numerous paints. I usually use extremely light coats to avoid the issue.