From: dodgew200@mchsi.com
Date: Mon Apr 29 2002 - 14:53:35 PDT
An electrostatic paint machine put a positive charge (or
is it negitive..)in the paint and an opposite charge on
the target. Paint literaly is sucked onto the surface
with very little overspray or "paint cloud" I saw on
demonstrated once a long time ago, pretty cool. I may be
a little hazy on the details, but that's it in a
nutshell.
-- Rob '70 W200 Crew Cab '65 A100 Custom Sportsman > Sure, but first.... What's an 'elecastate machine'? > Got something to do with electricity in the State of CA? > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "sandman9" <sandman9@optonline.net> > To: "Military Vehicles Mailing List" <mil-veh@mil-veh.org> > Sent: Monday, April 29, 2002 5:21 PM > Subject: [MV] Aervoe Paint ? > > > > Can anyone tell me if I can use Aervoe or Gillespie paint in a elecastate > > machine? > > > > > > ===Mil-Veh is a member-supported mailing list=== > > To unsubscribe, send e-mail to: <mil-veh-off@mil-veh.org> > > To switch to the DIGEST mode, send e-mail to <mil-veh-digest@mil-veh.org> > > To reach a human, contact <ack@mil-veh.org> > > > ===Mil-Veh is a member-supported mailing list=== > To unsubscribe, send e-mail to: <mil-veh-off@mil-veh.org> > To switch to the DIGEST mode, send e-mail to <mil-veh-digest@mil-veh.org> > To reach a human, contact <ack@mil-veh.org>
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