Repainting aluminium garden furniture. Advice required.?

Have some old strike aluminium garden furniture, paint peeling sour, white powdery 'salts' underneath. Some of the paint scrapes confidently and other places seem all right stuck. Do I need to remove it adjectives? How shall I treat the 'salts'. With acid? What is the best type of paint to use for repainting.
Thanks.


Answers:    Not sure if this would be equal but I painted my aluminum siding. I used a detergent called "TSP". It comes within powder or liquid form. With previously painted aluminum you obligation to get the interpret and chalking substance off. The powder form desires to be mixed with dampen. Just spray it on and let is sit for a few minutes. After that only just wash past its sell-by date. In your case trademark sure you get adjectives of the old paint stale. I would use sand paper to rough up the aluminum. After that it should be tart etched. This will help the paint stick. Use a epoxy base primer. After that I would just use a outdoor spray paint. I freshly found a link on how to repaint aluminum......

http://www.polyfiber.com/techquestions/s...

Good Luck!
I deliberate you need to use an Etch Primer for ferrous and non ferrous surfaces.

Ensure surfaces are verbs, dry, free from dirt, grease and other contamination.
I would use a pressure washer preferably one with at lowest possible 2,000 psi and with a power turbo tip. The turbo tip have a small pinpoint that oscillates surrounded by a spiral...really does a good profession at paint stripping! You may not get adjectives the paint off but I don't feel that matters much. The "salts" nouns like corrosion but I conjecture if you pressure washed it they should blast away. (you may own some pit marks). I would spray a exterior primer on it (oil based) then when dry you could step over that with a virtuous quality exterior latex paint. I hope you can find access to the equipment as it beat a scraper and wire brush hand down!

Another alternative would be to use some paint remover. read the instructions and see what happens on a small piece similar to a leg or something!
The easiest way to step about this problem is to first remove adjectives of the "salts" otherwise known as efflorescence by using a mixture of a product call TSP and warm river - after this is done, wash the remaining solution stale with heat water - once dry use a latex bonding primer specifically made to hug to aluminum - after this, topcoat the aluminum. As far as the best paint to use, that would be an exterior enamel. They tend to be a little more durable than an acrylic. Make sure you buy a water-based product, an alkyd or grease will yellow and chip over time. Water base products tend to remain a little more flexible.
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