still trying to work out how to cure this flameproof Very High Temperature coating I've used on my brake drums and exhaust manifold.
For those unacquainted with the saga, these coatings are sprayed on like paint, but then have to be cured by baking, at specific, progressively higher temperatures, until they achieve their (expensive) solvent etc resistant properties.
The thing is, the highest temperature they have to be cured at is well higher than a domestic oven (1000 degrees F

So someone, somewhere, must know of the correct way to bake these things! The manifold is less of an issue as I can cure it in situ by running the engine. The brake drums however are a problem. Theoretically they could be cured in situ as well, by braking hard lol. However the coating is very vulnerable until baked - it just rubs off like a powder - and I have to work on the brakes and the suspension after I put them back on the van, so they will get knocked and scratched etc. The work on the van is all being held up by this one link in the chain.
Any ideas?
Enquiries about potters' kilns have borne no fruit at all - no one round here wants to risk putting these things in their kiln in case they give off fumes etc while they are curing and affect subsequent firings of pots.
I'm thinking of resorting to a barbecue and hoping that I can get the highest temperature by sheer luck.
Thought I might ring round some local garages and see whether they have used them and if so how they have done the baking.
Help!
wibble
ps sorry to start a whole new thread but I can't find the old one
