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What is Powder Coating?

Powder coating is an advanced method of applying a decorative and protective finish to a wide range of materials and products. The powder used for the process is a mixture of finely ground particles of pigment and resin, which is sprayed onto a surface to be coated. The charged powder particles adhere to the electrically grounded surfaces until heated and fused into a smooth coating in a curing oven. The result is a uniform durable, high-quality, and attractive finish.

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What are its advantages?

More Durable

Powder coating gives you one of the most economical, longest-lasting, and most color-durable quality finishes available. Powder coated surfaces are more resistant to chipping, scratching, fading, and wearing than other finishes. Color selection is virtually unlimited with high and low gloss, metallic, and clear finishes available. And colors stay bright and vibrant longer. Texture selections range from smooth surfaces to a wrinkled or matte finish and rough textures designed for hiding surface imperfections.

Where is powder coating used?

Thousands of products and parts are currently powder coated:

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Automotive

The automotive industry uses powder coating on wheels, bumpers, hubcaps, door handles, decorative trim and accent parts, truck beds, radiators, filters, and numerous engine parts. A clear powder topcoat has been developed to protect auto bodies. BMW and Volvo are using it on their new model cars, and GM, Ford, and Chrysler have formed a consortium to test this technique on their production line.

Everyday Products

There are also innumerable everyday uses for powder coated products such as lighting fixtures, antennas, bicycles, toys, mowers, patio furniture, BBQ grills, tool boxes, electrical components and grill guards all benefit from a powder coated finish.

Non-Metal Products

While powder coating started as an alternative to finishing metal products only, the development of powder that can be cured at lower temperatures has allowed powder coating to expand to non-metal surfaces such as ceramics and plastic applications. All "hard use" products retain their new look much longer.

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