Epoxy glues would be best.
I wouldn't, it will not stick well.
I wouldn't if it was my driveway. I'd power wash it off first then the driveway coatings would stick better.
Yes it does.
Do you mean "ACRYLIC" paint?? Probably. Make sure the surface is clean. If it is glossy, you will need to sand it a little to rough it up so the the new paint has something to stick to.
It's hard to get a paint to stick to stainless. Use an etching primer and then an enamel-type of paint.
I wouldn't, it will not stick well.
I wouldn't if it was my driveway. I'd power wash it off first then the driveway coatings would stick better.
Yes it does.
Do you mean "ACRYLIC" paint?? Probably. Make sure the surface is clean. If it is glossy, you will need to sand it a little to rough it up so the the new paint has something to stick to.
Yes, sometimes. The heat tends to make the paint flake off. Type of steel does not matter.
I,v got over 20 years inpainting. application, you know...learned it the hard way. painting over epoxy is always tricky.( I,m talking about the two part epoxy) if you start with epoxy and stick with epoxy, usually you'lldo just fine. any kind of latex paintwill lift off of epoxy. oil paint will stick a bit longer, but that's coming up to.thewhole point of epoxy is to have nothingstickto its surfaceso thatit cleans easy.you can try and strip it, messy and time consuming. now your mixing chemicals. one tip.. take a piece of sand paper, sand a small area. if what you sanded leaves dust.. I would paint that. if balls up or rolls? its the same as painting over rubber. hopes this helps.
It's hard to get a paint to stick to stainless. Use an etching primer and then an enamel-type of paint.
A metal epoxy is an epoxy that will glue matals. Two good ones are J B Weld and Pow-R-Stick.
Epoxy adhesive can stick to almost anything except some PTFE's and some of the new polyethylenes. It can stick to metals, woods, most plastics (except the fore-mentioned) and stones and rocks.
The appropriate paint to use on a toilet bowl is an appliance epoxy spray paint. However, even that won't stick to the toilet bowl unless it is abraded and primed first. Drain the water from the toilet bowl and let it dry. Once it's dry, sand it until the surface feels gritty. Next, prime it with an acrylic latex spray primer. This prevents the epoxy paint from eventually flaking. Pain the toilet bowl however you'd like.
No how can that be... if it can stick to steel and steel is meatal than it can stick to metal.
Epoxy is best for that.