The Automatic Powder Coating Line Including The Following Six Parts:
Part 1:Spray pretreatment system Multi-stage spray pretreatment system is engineered to prepare a product's surface for painting. Using spray pretreatment methods, dirt, oils and contaminants are removed from the product's surface and phosphate or conversion coatings are applied to help prevent corrosion and increase paint adhesion.
Different product's material requires different stages. Our engineers analyze the requirements before developing equipment that can be incorporated into the overall automatic powder coating line.
Part 2: Drying oven
Drying oven which drying the water after pretreatment is designed according to customer actual conditions. The temperature need is around 120-130 degrees.
Part 3: Powder Coating Booth
Automatic powder coating booth (Made of PVC or galvanized steel) with big cyclone and secondary filter system, reciprocator, sieving system. Including our ColorEasy fast color change booth (complete the color change within 15 minutes)
Part 4: Electrostatic Powder Coating Gun
Automatic powder coating guns and manual powder coating guns (For manual repair coating). All the guns are researched and produced by our company and shows perfect performance on powder coating.
Part 5: Powder Curing Oven
Curing oven: Tunnel curing oven with air curtain, bridge type curing oven (designed according to your actual working condition)
Part 6: Conveying System
Conveying system: Closed-circuit conveyor and intelligent automatic lubricating injector, high efficiency and reduce the labor cost.
Why should I choose powder coating over wet spray painting? Powder coating is just "flat-out" superior to wet spray in so many ways. If your part is capable of being powder coated, their is really no reason why you would be compelled to choose otherwise. It's generally less expensive to powder coat a part once than have it painted several times during its life.
Powder coating is not subject to the extra time it takes to set up and break down from wet spray paint. The chemicals used in wet spray painting have to evaporate which can take up to weeks before a complete "cure" is attained. Powder coated parts are "cured" as soon as the part cools down. Further, the thermal bonding process used in powder coating makes for a much more durable finish than wet spray paint. Powder coating is also more environmentally friendly than wet spray painting because it does not involve the potentially harmful chemicals used in a wet spray painting.
As mentioned above, wet spray painting involves the use of chemicals that can be potentially hazardous to people and the environment if not dealt with properly. Powder coating uses an air gun to blow away misapplied powder rather than resort to the chemical thinners that wet spray paints require to clean up, or fix, application errors.
Powder coating offers a wider variety of colors and textures. The powder can be engineered to wrinkle or create veins of different colors throughout the coating when baked. Wet spray paint is more limited in what it can produce. Yet the possibilities with powder coatings are endless.
And finally, powder coating is more durable and weather resistant than wet spray paint could ever be. When we bake out the parts, the powder melts, forming a seamless bond around the parts. This bonding process creates a virtually unbreakable sheet of protection upon the surface of the parts.