When you’re engineering an environmentally friendly metal-coating process, success relies on measuring and controlling temperature.
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| James Solomon monitors the surface temperature of a wheel that just had a primer coat applied in the spray booth in Helios Coatings research laboratory. |
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The rims and caps go through an infrared curing process, then through a high-tech ultraviolet system.
"The whole idea is not to heat your aluminum above 200°C [400°F] -- you'll lose the temper in the wheel," Summers says. "There's an art to doing it without destroying the aluminum itself, so we're real careful about temperatures. We don't just throw them in a baking oven. It's all in timing, distance and intensity of the radiation."
Monitoring that precise heating process was one place where the infrared thermometer from Fluke paid off for Summers. The laboratory's experimental infrared curing setup includes a built-in thermometer. During testing though, Summers discovered that hand-holding the Fluke unit at approximately 18" from the slowly rotating parts delivered more accurate readings.
"When I found out what that 568 did, I was like, ‘holey schmoley,' this thing's like a Godsend," Summers added. "As far as the menu, it's extremely intuitive." Adjusting the emissivity for accurate readings on different materials required only a few touches on the control buttons.
Summers also experimented with the software that comes with the thermometer. "Most of the software I deal with on a daily basis is just a pain. You need a copy of ‘War and Peace' for a manual. With this, I was up and running and able to do a bake curve in 30 seconds."
A bake curve displays the rate at which parts in the finishing process are heated and cooled over time.
"Heating a clear coat too fast will yellow the finish," Summers explained. Gradual heating and cooling delivers the desired quality. PH
For more information from Fluke Corp., call (425) 446-4620 or visit www.fluke.com.