For Scott Landgraf, owner of Ekon Powder Coating (Buffalo, Minnesota), the
decision to open a powder coating job shop ten years ago was a simple one.
Ive been painting just about my entire life, says Mr. Landgraf.
Before starting Ekon, I painted lawn tractor trailers, wiped down with
thinner and painted. It wasn't very good. I also painted cars and I owned a
body shop at one point.
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Ekon's eight-stage washer runs Chemetall Oakite's
new five-stage "ferroxphate" process-clean, rinse,
ferroxphate, rinse, non-chrome rinse. Three additional stages
remove laser scale and light storage rust. |
When he established Ekon, Mr. Landgraf decided that the new company would perform
powder coating exclusively. I had heard a fair amount about [powder coating]
and had seen it applied, he said. It seemed like a good up and coming
business to get in to. My goal was to give my customers what I would wanta
smooth, flawless paint, parts picked up and dropped off at my door, for a fair
price. The finish had better last, and I need to be proud to give it to my customers.
Today, Ekon finishes 18,000 different types of parts annually. The companys
million-unit annual production output includes end products as varied as components
for industrial/commercial floor maintenance equipment, architectural construction
products, point-of-purchase store fixtures, electrical enclosures, shopping
carts and steel fencing.
Quality Pretreatment
Two years ago, Mr. Landgraf opened a new 28,000 sq ft facility, roughly twice
the size of the original facility, giving Ekon approximately 44,000 sq ft, four
on line powder booths (three of which are mini-cyclone powder booths supplied
by Eurotech) and over 30 automatic and hand-held guns to apply a wide variety
of advanced powder coatings including TGIC polyesters, epoxies, hybrids and
super durables in four mini-cyclones.
As a progressive powder coater, Mr. Landgraf believes that every aspect of the
finishing process is critical, but he singles out one particular phase of the
operationvalue-added pretreatment. All powder coaters can do a good
job making a part look good, he says, but it is truly what we are
doing to the part before we paint that matters in the long run. Its going
to make that part look and last the way it should; it is going to give it some
life.
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Precleaning in stage one uses a low-foaming, heavy-duty liquid alkaline cleaner.
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It was Mr. Landgrafs desire to focus on quality that led to his recent
decision to introduce a new conversion coating technology into the facility.
(Ekon had previously used a high-performance iron phosphate process.)
In seeking ways to boost the quality of pretreatment, Mr. Landgraf turned to
Chemetall Oakite, Berkeley Heights,
NJa long-time supplier to Ekonfor assistance and was
introduced to Gardobond® A 4920, a patent-pending conversion
coating technology that bridges the salt spray performance gap between
iron and zinc phosphates. Gardobond has been dubbed a ferroxphate
conversion coating by Oakite because of the thin, amorphous, iron-rich
pre-paint conversion coating that develops on steel substrates.
Gardobond® A 4920s optimum operating temperature is 80-110°F,
which is easily maintained through thermal transfer from the heated alkaline
cleaner. Even when operating in this low temperature range, Mr. Landgraf was
able to surpass iron phosphate salt spray results. Because this is considerably
lower than the temperature required for iron phosphates, it has amounted to
a considerable cost savings, giving Ekon a powerful incentive to conserve. The
energy savings are projected to exceed the cost of the ferroxphate chemical.
The Gardobond A 4920 process is an acidic, liquid conversion coating applied
immediately following the cleaning and rinsing stages of a spray pretreatment
line. Surfaces must be cleaned prior to conversion coating, so Ekon uses a low-foaming,
heavy-duty liquid alkaline cleaner in the cleaning stage. Because Ekon is quality-conscious,
it uses RO rinses between every stage. The final stage at Ekon is a non-chrome
seal that reacts with the Gardobond A 4920 surface to enhance paint bonding
and under-coat corrosion resistance.
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The ferroxphate process produces powder coated products with excellent
corrosion resistance. Salt spray tests run on steel panels pretreated
in-plant show just 1.5 mm of scribe creepage at 500 hours.
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Concentrations of the ferroxphate solution are kept between two and four percent
by volume. Instead of having to maintain tight pH ranges, the Gardobond process
is easily controlled with standard titrations. Typical application times range
between 20 and 90 seconds.
The Gardobondprocess is currently used in thelarger of Ekons two spray-washer
pretreatment lines.Five stages of the washer handle the Gardobond process. The
other three are used for removal of laser scale and light storage rust prior
to ferroxphating, a step which Mr. Landgraf feels is critical to successful
coating of laser-cut and welded parts.
The second line currently runs a conventional five-stage iron phosphate process.
Mr. Landgraf indicated that this line may at some point be converted to the
Gardobond process as well.
Shutting off the gas
Every morning, Ekon runs up the heaters of the Gardobond stage to 85°F then
shuts off the gas. The heat-up takes as little as 30 minutes. For the rest of
the shift they run with burners off.
On the eight-stage pretreatment line, Ekon is projected to save approximately
$14,000 per year in heating costs, based on the reduction of operating temperatures
by 32 degrees from the iron phosphate pretreatment used previously (also supplied
by Chemetall Oakite). Additional savings may be realized by reducing heater
maintenance, parts and labor.
Ekon has achieved this pretreatment economy and efficiency while actually enhancing
salt spray results. The new ferroxphate coating outperformed the high-performance
iron phosphate previously used.
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| Table 1: ASTM B 117
Salt Spray Performance Polyester Powder Coat |
As shown in Table 1 (at left), salt spray tests run on steel panels pretreated
at Ekon and tested at Chemetall Oakites lab show just 1.5 mm of scribe
creepage at 500 hours, compared to more than twice that3.5 mmfor
a premium iron phosphate coating. The paint applied after pretreatment by Ekon
was a Sherwin-Williams TGIC polyester powder in both cases.
One of the unexpected benefits of the change was that washer clean-up and maintenance
have been simplified. Descaling has not been necessary. Only a light haze appears
on washer walls. Sludge is softer and lighter, making it easy to remove by washing
down with a hose. In Ekons particularcase, disposal of spent solutions
is nodifferent than that required for iron phosphatesadjust the pH and
send the solution to the POTW.
Pretreatment for the long run
Though delighted with the results of the new ferroxphate line, Mr. Landgraf
wasn't done tinkering. He added an acid stage to the Gardobond system (for removal
of laser scale and light storage rust from laser-cut and welded parts prior
to ferroxphating), calling it a wonderful improvement on the product Ekon
has to offer.
In what has become a very competitive industry, Ekon Powder Coating has thrived
by offering its customers long-lasting, high-quality powder coating finishes.
At the same time, it has benefitted from the significant economies of ferroxphate
energy conservation.