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Exhaust manifold and pipe ceramic coating
joemotion - 20/9/10 at 08:45 AM

As per this site - http://www.camcoat.u-net.com/Exhausts.htm

Would you not need to put exhaust wrap around the pipes if this was done? Anybody on here had experience of this? coatings inside and out of the pipes?

Also had issues with paintwork discolouring due to heat close to the exhaust pipe where it comes out of the engine bay which is why i was looking for a nicer looking alternative to exhaust wrap


adrianreeve - 20/9/10 at 09:03 AM

According to a recent article in kit car mag, it reduces engine bay temps more than wrapping does, so no need to wrap if you have it coated. Thinking about it myself, they do a nice range of finishes, and it means I can weld up a mild steel manifold myself, then have it coated. Should then be as weather proof as a stainless system.


MakeEverything - 20/9/10 at 09:09 AM

I remember there was a company in Kent that used to do this, and i also remember that the heat radiation is significantly (60%?) reduced after coating.

Ive considered having this done for mine and seeing as my exhaust is only going to be about 600mm long, its going to be quite cheap too!!


Strontium Dog - 20/9/10 at 09:21 AM

DP due to infuriatingly slow interweb connection! And that's AFTER BT fixed the lines which took many months to achieve

I live in the sticks too so no fibre optic for me

[Edited on 20/9/10 by Strontium Dog]


Strontium Dog - 20/9/10 at 09:23 AM

I have a ceramic coated Aussie DP on my turbo Celica. The turbo glows cherry and lights up the bay but the ceramic DP is still good 3 years and 30,000miles later! It definitely helps keep under bonnet temps down but apparently if you wrap it as well it is prone to cracking. It seems that you can either lag or ceramic coat but probably not both!

As to protecting paintwork, the DP on my car still gets bloody hot so I don't know how effective it will be at that!


minitici - 20/9/10 at 09:25 AM

You can get DIY ceramic coatings for your manifolds.
I use Cermakrome which is a waterbased spray on paint.

Pipes need to be blast cleaned then pre-heated.

Paint is sprayed on and the water baked off.

Finally the ceramic paint needs to be cured in an oven but a blowtorch works just as well.

After applying the blowtorch the stuff still looks the same (matt white finish) but once you rub off the top surface with Scotchbrite there is a nice shiney ceramic layer underneath.

This layer can be polished further if required.
cermakrome
cermakrome


bartonp - 20/9/10 at 10:01 AM

quote:
Originally posted by minitici
You can get DIY ceramic coatings for your manifolds.
I use Cermakrome which is a waterbased spray on paint.

<snippage>


Where do you get this from? (tried Google, mostly Merkin sites).
Cheers,
Phil.


minitici - 20/9/10 at 10:34 AM

quote:
Originally posted by bartonp
quote:
Originally posted by minitici
You can get DIY ceramic coatings for your manifolds.
I use Cermakrome which is a waterbased spray on paint.

<snippage>




Where do you get this from? (tried Google, mostly Merkin sites).
Cheers,
Phil.

Demon Tweeks


bartonp - 20/9/10 at 11:12 AM

quote:
Originally posted by minitici
quote:
Originally posted by bartonp
quote:
Originally posted by minitici
You can get DIY ceramic coatings for your manifolds.
I use Cermakrome which is a waterbased spray on paint.

<snippage>




Where do you get this from? (tried Google, mostly Merkin sites).
Cheers,
Phil.

Demon Tweeks


Ta. Strange Google didn't help...
Note DT have confused DegF and DegC!


joemotion - 20/9/10 at 11:46 AM

Reckon im defo going to have this done when i take her off the road as can ditch the exhaust wrap which looks messy down the side of my car

just seen another one here which looks good - http://www.zircotec.com/