KompetentKrew
Well-Known Member
Someone once remarked to me that,"if you can piss you can paint, can't you?" Out of embarrassment I have kept my mouth shut ever since. I have no idea what I'm doing, and no idea about the different kinds of coatings - emulsion, two-pack and IDK what else.
But this week I'm in the process of replacing the mechanical components of my fridge (which stopped dead around Christmas) and I'd rather like to paint the inside - removing one of the screws that mounted the evaporator plate caused the plywood to splinter a bit, and the existing paint is flaking just a little. It's not bad, and it has probably lasted many years since the original fridge was installed (could it be as long as 30 years!?) but the old evaporator plate is out now and the box is completely empty so this would be a good opportunity to make a good job of it. Hopefully it will last many years again.
A neighbour is advocating a two-pack ceramic based paint, but a number of previous threads here have said flowcoat, which sounds like it would get a good finish easily:
East Coast Fibreglass have white flowcoat starting at £19, which is the right price, but I'm presently in the EU and can't find flowcoat listed as sites like Seashop.be or Compass2 4. I have even checked SVB24, against whom I hold a bitter grudge, to no avail. What should I be looking for, please?
But this week I'm in the process of replacing the mechanical components of my fridge (which stopped dead around Christmas) and I'd rather like to paint the inside - removing one of the screws that mounted the evaporator plate caused the plywood to splinter a bit, and the existing paint is flaking just a little. It's not bad, and it has probably lasted many years since the original fridge was installed (could it be as long as 30 years!?) but the old evaporator plate is out now and the box is completely empty so this would be a good opportunity to make a good job of it. Hopefully it will last many years again.
A neighbour is advocating a two-pack ceramic based paint, but a number of previous threads here have said flowcoat, which sounds like it would get a good finish easily:
If you mean home-built, then I'd use flow-coated GRP: fit for the job, strong, versatile, vapour- and waterproof, easy to clean.
Both. I understood the suggestion was that if anyone does make a fridge liner out of plywood, one should coat both sides with epoxy (two or three coats) to produce an impermeable barrier with a white flow coat on the inside to produce a wipe clean finish. Not sure how you’re going to end up with condensate on the outside because you’d make sure the insulation is tight up against the exterior surface and you’d presumably ensure that no warm moist air ever got near that area anyway.
As I said in a previous post, once you’ve made the box, if you drill any holes to allow pipes for refrigerant and thermostat through, you’ve got to make sure you seal any raw edges of ply you’ve exposed. Simple enough with more epoxy and flow coat.
(When I fitted the pipes through my s/s box, the hole got a quick squirt of expanding foam to seal them in.)
My current fridge box is made of stainless steel, which I think is the best, but the previous one had been painted with flowcoat and that was perfectly functional.
East Coast Fibreglass have white flowcoat starting at £19, which is the right price, but I'm presently in the EU and can't find flowcoat listed as sites like Seashop.be or Compass2 4. I have even checked SVB24, against whom I hold a bitter grudge, to no avail. What should I be looking for, please?