Author Topic: Any luck painting exhaust?  (Read 4163 times)

johnk

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Any luck painting exhaust?
« on: June 13, 2017, 16:36:42 »
My car is stripped and ready to be media blasted next week. My original thought was to replace the exhaust but I am finding it to be very solid end-to-end along with the original Mercedes muffler I added two years ago. It's a full rotisserie restoration so I don't want to put a solid but rusty exhaust back on it, and I'm not too excited about the cost and time to put a new system on it when the old one is solid and sounds great.

Anybody have any luck with repainting their existing exhaust? I was going to have it blasted next week along with the chassis and paint it then, but what I am reading is the quality exhaust paints require baking at various temperatures.

Any guidance is greatly appreciated.

thanks
JohnK
John Krystowski
Avon Ohio
1968 Euro 280sl under restoration
2016 Jag F-Type R sold june 2021
1950 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS For sale
2008 E350
2007 GL 450
2019 BMW 540

hauser

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #1 on: June 13, 2017, 17:14:06 »
This may be a better option than painting.

https://www.jet-hot.com/

thelews

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #2 on: June 13, 2017, 17:55:41 »
jet hot is good for the exhaust manifold.  I just used BBQ flat black from beyond the manifold.
Enjoy some pictures at this link:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8292359@N06/sets/72157603240571101/show/

John - Wisconsin
1967 Early 250 SL Red/Caviar, Manual #1543
1961 190 SL 23K miles
1964 Porsche 356
1970 Porsche 911E
1991 BMW 318is
1966 Jaguar XKE
1971 Alfa Romeo GTV 1750

johnk

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #3 on: June 14, 2017, 02:16:42 »
How long did the BBQ paint last?

The shipping cost of Jet-hot would be prohibitive unless I cut my exhaust apart.

John Krystowski
Avon Ohio
1968 Euro 280sl under restoration
2016 Jag F-Type R sold june 2021
1950 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS For sale
2008 E350
2007 GL 450
2019 BMW 540

wwheeler

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #4 on: June 16, 2017, 15:02:33 »
You just need to find a local powder coating shop that can ceramic coat something as long as an exhaust system. They do exist and I had mine done with satin black. I welded my entire system and it looks unbelievable and will last a lifetime. I used a time valve stainless exhaust but wanted the correct black look. It is even easier if you clamp the system together because of the shorter lengths.   

If you plan on keeping the car and you ceramic coat the exhaust, I would use a new system either factory or stainless. The exhaust rusts from the inside out. While it will look pretty on the outside, it will be rusting on the inside and you can't stop that.
Wallace
Texas
'68 280SE W111 coupe
'60 220SE W128 coupe
'70 Plymouth Roadrunner 440+6

johnk

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #5 on: June 17, 2017, 13:28:15 »
Thanks Wallace. I didn't realize you could powder coat an exhaust. A friend of my son has a commercial powder coat business. I will see what he quotes to see if its worth doing now or if I should just wait until I need a new exhaust. I probably should just put a new exhaust on given everything else I am doing. Just hate to through away what appears to be perfectly good when a new one is a lot of work to assemble.
John Krystowski
Avon Ohio
1968 Euro 280sl under restoration
2016 Jag F-Type R sold june 2021
1950 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS For sale
2008 E350
2007 GL 450
2019 BMW 540

wwheeler

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #6 on: June 17, 2017, 14:00:07 »
It is a similar process as powder coating but it is called ceramic coating for the higher temperatures. Powder coating is only good to about 350*F or so. Ceramic is good to at least 1000* I believe.

For the actual manifolds, you can use this:  http://swaintech.com/race-coatings/race-coating-descriptions/white-lightning-exhaust-coatings/ It is a very durable finish and has a whitish color which resembles the factory exhaust manifold color.   
 
Wallace
Texas
'68 280SE W111 coupe
'60 220SE W128 coupe
'70 Plymouth Roadrunner 440+6

johnk

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #7 on: June 18, 2017, 19:12:35 »
Thanks Wallace. I was planning on having the manifolds ceramic coating. Perhaps the entire exhaust is next, but only if I go new.
John Krystowski
Avon Ohio
1968 Euro 280sl under restoration
2016 Jag F-Type R sold june 2021
1950 Alfa Romeo 6C 2500 SS For sale
2008 E350
2007 GL 450
2019 BMW 540

thelews

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #8 on: June 19, 2017, 12:06:42 »
I've only done it once on my 190 SL.  That was a few years ago.  I drive it a few hundred a year.  It's so easy to do, just slide cardboard between the exhaust and floor pan, that recoating is not an issue.  Like I said, Duplicolor engine enamel is nice stuff too.
Enjoy some pictures at this link:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/8292359@N06/sets/72157603240571101/show/

John - Wisconsin
1967 Early 250 SL Red/Caviar, Manual #1543
1961 190 SL 23K miles
1964 Porsche 356
1970 Porsche 911E
1991 BMW 318is
1966 Jaguar XKE
1971 Alfa Romeo GTV 1750

Tomnistuff

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Re: Any luck painting exhaust?
« Reply #9 on: June 19, 2017, 22:03:35 »
I used brush-on Rustoleum BBQ paint on the exhaust pipes.  It was semi-gloss black and stuck really well to a stainless steel exhaust system that had simply been rubbed down with lacquer thinner (in a well ventilated area).  Baking it in an oven wasn't necessary since I had a 320 HP 4.4 Liter three-carburetor Columbo V12 Ferrari engine baking it between Maryland and West Palm Beach, Florida.

The paint lasted very well for at least 3,000 miles and one year, then I sold the car.  It was also good enough to fool the Ferrari Concours judges (stainless steel is against the rules).  I just polished the last foot of the stainless pipes and put some little stripes of red vinyl Dollarama electrical tape around the pipes between the black pipes and the polished stainless tips and then stuck some ANSA stickers on the polished tips. 

If I hadn't been so cheap, I would have jet-hotted them.

Tom Kizer
Apparently late 1966 230SL 4-spd manual (Italian Version)
Owned since 1987 and wrapping up a full rotisserie restoration/modernization.
Was: Papyrus White 717G with Turquoise MBtex 112 and Kinderseat
Is: Dark Blue 332G with Dark Blue Leather (5300, I think)