Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Grey PVC Electrical Conduit for Ports

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #16
    I painted white polyvinyl chloride (PVC) port tubes with plain old Rustoleum stone texture paint, no problems. They were prepped by cleaning and light sanding. The tubes had a flare routed into the medium density fiberboard (MDF) baffles.

    I guess I didn't know I couldn't do it.

    What does a pirate use to caulk his ship?

    Arrrr TV.

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by djg View Post
      I painted white polyvinyl chloride (PVC) port tubes with plain old Rustoleum stone texture paint, no problems. They were prepped by cleaning and light sanding. The tubes had a flare routed into the medium density fiberboard (MDF) baffles.

      I guess I didn't know I couldn't do it.

      What does a pirate use to caulk his ship?

      Arrrr TV.
      What I was thinking is ... you have a PVC tube mounted in a wood baffle. Then you route a flare on the baffle face that cuts into the tube. That portion of the painted tube will be gone exposing the PVC color.

      Not worth debating. The grey seems to be available if you ever need it.

      Comment


      • #18
        Originally posted by djg View Post
        I painted white polyvinyl chloride (PVC) port tubes with plain old Rustoleum stone texture paint, no problems. They were prepped by cleaning and light sanding. The tubes had a flare routed into the medium density fiberboard (MDF) baffles.

        I guess I didn't know I couldn't do it.

        What does a pirate use to caulk his ship?

        Arrrr TV.
        Drinking rum doesn't make you drunk, it makes you a Pirate Arrr!

        Comment


        • #19

          Comment

          Working...
          X