| | December 20209CIOReview· So the finish could be zinc or zinc/nickel electroplating, followed by a trivalent RoHs compliant passivate, followed by an inorganic finish such as · E-coat· Powdercoat· Wet Paint · Adhesives (rubber bonding)· Zinc Flake All of the above matrix coatings offer an entirely different perspective and performance characteristic that is NOT available from a single layer of a given coating. Working with an applicator whose chemical supplier has all of the finishes required will eliminate finger-pointing if there are coating issues. · Consideration of final coating thickness is also a critical element when choosing an applicator. In the business of dip/spin zinc flake coatings, appropriate equipment is needed to minimize head or thread fill (for fasteners) or tapped hole fill. Not all applicators have this application equipment available.· Does the applicator have a quality system in place? Such accreditations like NADCAP, CQI, or xyz or abc may give you the quality level that you are looking for. Not all applicators have advanced quality systems.· Does the part have to mate with another part from a different source? This could raise questions regarding decorative "color matching" or "galvanic corrosion concerns."· Does the applicator have access to a technical center that can apply various coating types for evaluation? Can the technical center run the necessary corrosion tests that are required?· Does the applicator have all of the tooling needed, or will new special tooling be necessary. Perhaps they make their own fixtures. In some instances, the company supplying the coating materials to the applicator has significant resources at their disposal. This might include the following:· Technical Centers with large part process capabilities in house to provide products like sample runs of various coatings· Metallurgical and analytical laboratories that are able to look at surface conditions as well as process analytics. Both aiding in defining a process or identifying the root causes of defects· Multiple coating capabilities. This offers the OEM or Tier the opportunity to explore all types of coatings or in some cases, coatings that consist of both organic and inorganic coatings.· A catalog of already proven finishes of both single coating outcomes as well as multi-coating outcomes. This can often supply "off the shelf" results aiding in the fast design of the final finish.· Global services, allowing for cut and paste of the desired finish(s) applied elsewhere in the world for uniform supply chain results.When faced with the challenge of defining a coating type as well as an applicator network that meets your needs, folding in a coatings manufacturer can often shorten the cycle to market entry. TechnicalCenterswith largepart processcapabilitiesin houseto provideproducts likesample runsof variouscoatings
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