5 Must-Have Features in a Powder Coating Manufacturer

05 Jun.,2025

 

10 Tips for the Perfect Powder Coated Finish

1. Communicate with your customer 

The business of powder coating requires excellent communication with your customers. When you agree to powder coat something, make sure you get all the details correct. Providing an accurate quote is important. Also make sure you know the correct color and gloss that’s required. Find out if there is a particular mil thickness or salt-spray rating that the finish must meet. Is the finish for exterior or interior use? Is there a 3, 5, or 10-year warranty? Does the customer need a heat resistance rating? Understanding the end-use of the part is critical when you are doing a job for a customer. This can save you a lot of headaches at delivery and make for a completely satisfied customer that will spread the word about the fantastic coating service you supplied.

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3. Prepare your metal

For the most durable finish, make sure your parts are etched or blasted in such a way that the powder coating can stick to the metal. Coatings have a hard time adhering to smooth metal like extruded aluminum or machined steel, so make sure your coating has something to grab onto by blasting or using a chemical pretreatment process. If premium exterior durability is desired, this is the step where you can add an extra rust preventative treatment.

4. Ground your parts

Use clean hooks and racks as much as possible. Bury an 8-foot electrical grounding rod in or near the booth and connect a 14 gauge or heavier cable with a sturdy alligator clamp to attach to your racks. In a pinch you can use the grounding wire from the gun unit, but your powder will stay on the part better with a stronger ground. Set aside a little time each week to grind or blast the tops of your racks to get good metal to metal contact with your hooks. Also grind or blast a spot on your racks for the clamp to attach. You may want to add a bolt or section of rod to your rack that’s easy for the clamp to grab. Hooks can be used 3-4 times before they need to be cleaned or replaced. Hooks using diamond or square stock typically give better contact and leave smaller hook marks.

5. Use only clean, dry air at a consistent pressure

Air pressure supplied to your powder gun should be around 80 p.s.i. and the pressure needs to stay the same throughout the day. Install a secondary regulator and an oil/water filter before the gun. Be aware of other machines that use air in the shop because spraying powder at varying air pressures will give you unpredictable results. Blast pots are notorious for using large volumes of air, so check your gauge if you are blasting and powder-coating at the same time using the same compressor. Water in the air lines is bad for the powder application unit (powder gun) and causes problems with the powder. For best results, especially in warm, humid climates, add a refrigerated line dryer.

6. Use consistent gun settings

Make sure you use the correct setting for the part and the powder being sprayed. Some heavier powders need more air while lighter powders need less. More kVs will help build powder on flat surfaces but will make it difficult to spray corners. Powder suppliers have recommended starter settings that you can tweak for your process. If you have a professional quality gun (which you should) from Wagner, Gema, or Nordson, your gun will have standard presets for large panels, recoating, and Faraday cage areas, as well as presets that can be used for custom settings.

7. Spray your powder consistently

Typically you want to use a cross coat pattern and will need to spray about 2-5 mils DFT. This often requires 3 passes but can be sometimes be done in 2 or require 4 or more depending on your powder setting and the speed of the sprayer. You usually need to give extra attention when powder coating a part to make sure you reach and cover the back of the part area first, then spray the fronts or Class A surfaces last.

8. Check your work before curing

Use an LED flashlight and inspect your powder coated parts before baking. If you catch a defect at this stage, it is much faster, easier, and cheaper to fix it than if you find it after the powder is cured. Look for light areas of powder coverage, especially in visible corners. Make sure you have a uniform coverage on large flat surfaces. If your parts have channels or features that can collect airborne powder, make sure you don’t too much powder build-up in those areas. Check all surfaces to make sure the applied powder looks like worn felt. If you see heavy starburst patterns or excessive edge build-up, blow off the excess and lightly feather in the coating with your powder gun to achieve a more even finish.

9. Use the correct cure temp and time

Check the product data sheet from the powder supplier and find their curing schedule. Don’t forget to add in the time it takes for your parts to reach curing temperature. If you add the heat-up time to the curing time in the schedule, that should equal the total time the parts need to be in the oven. For example, if a 1/4” thick plate steel part takes 20 minutes to get to 400°F with the oven set at 420°F, and you see it takes 10 minutes to cure the finish according to the data sheet, you’ll need to bake the parts for 30 minutes at 420°F to meet the required curing time and temperature. As a general rule, it’s better to leave the parts in the oven a couple minutes too long than to risk taking them out too soon. If you have any doubt that the finish is cured, perform a solvent rub test on a sample part. If you don’t get to metal after 20 double rubs, then you are typically good to go.

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10. Quality control your finished products

Solvent rub tests are great QC checks to make sure your parts are cured. You’ll also need a DFT (dry film thickness) gauge in order to accurately measure your powder thickness. You’ll typically want a finish that is 2 mils or thicker. If you find you are getting 8-10 mils, that’s probably too much unless the powder supplier recommends it or your customer specifies it. Do a cross-hatch adhesion test on a sample piece whenever you are testing new processes or trying new powders. You should also keep a record of defects such as trash, blisters, fibers, gloss variations, grind marks, fisheyes, pinholes, etc. so you really know what kind of problems you are having and aren’t just guessing or working from memory. Talk with your powder supplier or a coating expert and develop a plan to eliminate your most common defects one by one, rather than trying to fix everything at once. This will help you identify the exact causes of the issues you are having so you will know how to avoid them in the future.

The Magic of Powder Coating | Struxure Blog

Have you ever painted an outdoor bench, or other outdoor surface that is exposed to the elements 24/7, only to learn that you have to refresh your handiwork on a regular basis if you want to keep the product looking good? That’s because paint reacts to the sun’s UV rays and other harsh weather, causing bleaching, blistering, cracking, and chalking. Powder coating, on the other hand, is applied electrostatically and then cured under heat for a high-quality durable finish. It’s like a magic coating that, when properly applied and maintained, looks like new for many years to come.

The Powder Coating Process

The powder coating process was invented around by Daniel Gustin and became popular in America in the s. It works especially well on aluminum. Unlike liquid paint, powder coating is a dry finishing process. A precise formula of ingredients are melted and cooled and then ground into a powder, which is electrostatically applied. There are five basic steps to a commercial powder coating process:

  1. a multi-stage wash progression to clean the parts that will receive the powder coating and to etch them to ensure that the powder will stick;
  2. a drying stage at 265 degrees;
  3. a “painting” stage where the colored powder is applied using powder sprayers;
  4. a curing stage when products are cured at around 400 degrees;
  5. and final inspection to ensure the desired finish has been achieved.

Powder Coating Colors

How many colors are available? Well, as many colors as anyone can dream up. That’s because pigment is one of the ingredients in the powder formula and pigment can be translated into any hue. In addition to standard or custom solid colors, decorative designs can also be produced. This requires some additional steps, but the outcome is exceptional. Here’s how it works. If a decorative pattern, say woodgrain, is going to be applied, then a sublimate powder will be used for the base powder coating. A film, with an embedded design created from sublimate ink, will then be wrapped around the product, and any wrinkles will be suctioned out using a special vacuum process. When no air bubbles remain, the product will cure under approximately 400-degree heat. After the product has cooled, the film is removed and the design is now enduringly imprinted in place for a unique look.

Resilience of Powder Coating

Powder coating creates a durable, high-quality finish that is scratch resistant and low maintenance. Will the coating ever come off? Not if it’s properly applied and maintained. However, if you blast it with a power washer at close range with very high pressure, it could affect the integrity of the coating. Since a powder coated surface resists dirt and dust, however, using clean water from a garden hose and a soft-bristled brush is typically all that is needed to keep powder coated surfaces clean. Should a power washer be used, it should be kept at a low pressure (under 2,000 PSI) and reasonable distance for best results.

Challenges of Powder Coating

The equipment required for high-volume manufacturing powder coating is expensive, requires space to set up the various washing, drying, spraying, and curing stations, and necessitates trained laborers. That’s why there are powder coating businesses that have become the go-to experts for delivering this important application.

StruXure, a manufacturer of luxury pergolas and cabanas, has been working with some of the best powder coating companies in the business for the past decade and will continue to do so. However, in order to keep up with demand, particularly for custom orders, in , StruXure built its own powder coating facility at its Dahlonega, Georgia plant. As StruXure’s production increases and new products are developed, the in-house powder coating facility will help the company maintain the ability to respond quickly and seamlessly, particularly for customized orders.

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