This process involves sanding the surface to create a smooth base, applying a high-quality matte primer, and using specialized matte paint designed to minimize reflections. We spray the powder on the part, then heat it. It comes in hundreds of colors and textures (matte, glossy, or textured). Why it's good for high-end audio: Covers large areas well: Unlike paint, powder coating doesn't drip. It's perfect for speaker. How do you finish the inside of an Amp? This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links like Ebay, Amazon, and others. TDPRI crew, I built a custom cab for a blues jr. Can this be done. I use a hammond pre-gray primed steel chassis, perforated steel cage, steel bottom plate and end up grinding off the primer down to the metal around the drill locations--I think that's where he's having the problem--plus Gregg is a perfectionist, I'm not. So having said all that---my question is. We begin by abrading the surface so that paint will stick to it properly. Where a 2x2 foot sheet of 1/4 inch thick aluminum already anodized might cost as much as 10 sheets of raw stock! So anodizing seems to be out.
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