| First, stripping off the three old coats of paint, plus some of the original Delta grey in some places. | |
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| After a full weekend and a half-gallon of Jasco paint stripper, I was ready to tackle the holes in the cabinet. I had a scrap piece of sheet metal on which I tried several different tests to see what might hold. Since I don't weld, I had to come up with an alternative that might be durable enough to hold up for years into the future. I ended up using a combination that first patched the inside of the cabinet with a combination of wire mesh and bondo, which a friend described as analogous to drywall patching using mesh tape. Once that setup cured, I filled the holes from the outside with solder, then sanded flush with an angle grinder/sander. | |
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| Finally, I coated the entire assembly, interior and exterior, using rattle can cold galvanizing compound, followed by multiple coats of rattle can spray paint. I used Rustoleum Smoke Grey on the interior and Rustoleum Dark Machinery Grey on the exterior. The colors are essentially identical in tint, with the Smoke Grey more of a flat finish and the Dark Machinery Grey more gloss. | |
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