I have a recent interest in using water based or at least very low VOC
finishes, because one of the six other businesses in my building is a
midwifery, Center for the Childbearing Year. Even when I get my new
spray room finally installed and exhausting over the roof, I would like to
keep stuff like methyl ethyl ketones to a minimum.
I'll still need to use nitro for most touchups, but touchups are relatively
low volume. It will likely be at least another year before I get back in to
building, but since I need the booth anyway for touchup I would like to be
able to do finishing in my own shop.
Waterborne finishes are pretty hard to beat for low VOC's, or any toxins
that can't be easily filtered at the exhaust. The problem is I've never
found one I liked. I working with Bryan Galloup when he had a real bad
reaction to the McFadden's nitro, and we ended up working with chemists
from Valspar and KTM to find a suitable replacement. KTM tried to make
a number of different waterborne formulas for us, but they were all
lacking in one area or another. If it was hard enough to resist denting at
least as good as nitro, then it checked and crazed prematurely. If it was
plasticized enough to lessen the crazing then it would dent if way too
easily. Bonding, gloss level, all sorts of things that we just couldn't get to
our liking. We were just too used to nitro, and that was our benchmark at
the time.
By the time we had given up on KTM's stuff, we had reasonably isolated
the plasticizer or solvent or whatever it was (forgive my memory, but this
was at least 10 years ago) that Bryan had become sensitized to and were
able to go back to a different nitro formula through Valspar. I haven't
tried any water based stuff since then, so I don't know how much it has
changed. I would still like to give it another try for health and
environmental reasons, though I would prefer to find someone else who
has already found a good formula.
'Till then I'll still be using shellac and nitro. It's what I'm fluent in, and I
suppose I'll just have to spray when the midwifery is closed.
_________________ Eschew obfuscation, espouse elucidation.
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