B
bing98
I understand the low side temperature limitations of epoxy. 65 degrees minimum for 24 hours. I live in the northeast where the overnight temps are starting to dip into the mid 60s. I probably won't be ready to start priming for 2 weeks where the overnight temps might start touching the high 50s.
I'm working in an attached 1-car garage that is half insulated and sheet rocked(haven't had the time to finish). The temps should be correct during the day when I spray. Once the epoxy' parts can be handled I can move them into the house so they can cure properly. Is that safe or will they give off fumes?
For the parts on the car in the garage I was planning on buying a couple of small quartz space heaters. It's not safe to leave the heaters on overnight so I plan on putting them on repeat cycle timers to turn them on and off every 30 minutes or so to maintain warm temps overnight. It should work great as the garage will remain warmer than the outside for most of the night.....
Does this sound like an effective plan? Anyone want to share their methods of keep the painted metal at the correct temp?
Thanks
I'm working in an attached 1-car garage that is half insulated and sheet rocked(haven't had the time to finish). The temps should be correct during the day when I spray. Once the epoxy' parts can be handled I can move them into the house so they can cure properly. Is that safe or will they give off fumes?
For the parts on the car in the garage I was planning on buying a couple of small quartz space heaters. It's not safe to leave the heaters on overnight so I plan on putting them on repeat cycle timers to turn them on and off every 30 minutes or so to maintain warm temps overnight. It should work great as the garage will remain warmer than the outside for most of the night.....
Does this sound like an effective plan? Anyone want to share their methods of keep the painted metal at the correct temp?
Thanks