Moisture cured urethane paint

Discussion in 'Metal Boat Building' started by M&M Ovenden, Jun 14, 2009.

  1. M&M Ovenden
    Joined: Jan 2006
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    Location: Ottawa

    M&M Ovenden Senior Member

    Hi,

    It looks like moisture cured paints are gaining popularity in industrial applications. I was wondering if anybody has used this type of paint on any steel boat projects ?

    example: (but not the only manufacture)
    www.mcucoatings.com

    I'm wondering if MCU's are sold on how well they protect vs how they can be applied in tougher environments & with lower VOCs.

    Cheers,
    Mark
     
  2. CDK
    Joined: Aug 2007
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    Location: Adriatic sea

    CDK retired engineer

    Whole offshore platforms have been painted with that, so it will also be good for your steel hull. But bear in mind that the keyword is moisture, not water, rain etc. The surface needs to be dry and clean like for any other paint system, the moisture in the air replaces the hardener/catalyst.
     
  3. mark775

    mark775 Guest

    Impressive advertised properties. I'll try to find some and try.
     

  4. MikeJohns
    Joined: Aug 2004
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    Location: Australia

    MikeJohns Senior Member

    IMHO the success or failure of a paint coating is very much related to the thickness of the coating. Thin coats are often easily compromised no matter how tough the paint every little impurity dust particle or discontinuity becomes a little stress riser which in a thin coating leads to local failure. Anodic protection speeds up this failure through cathodic paint disbondment.

    A big advantage of epoxies is a high build thickness with each coat. Some of the epoxies are now applied with coatings up to 3mm with each application and this is common in demanding marine environments. Building up 150 microns with several coats is never going to be as good as applying 1000 microns and I really doubt you'll ever see urethanes as an economic or effective base coat on commercial submerged structures.


    cheers
     
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