|
FAULT
|
POSSIBLE CAUSES
|
REMEDY
|
NOTES
|
|
Algae or mould (green or black growth on the surface).
|
Damp environment.
|
Usually treated with biocidal agents, scrubbed off or high-pressure water washed.
|
|
|
Bittiness (rough surface).
|
Wrong paint storage conditions. Coatings used out of date.
|
Contact coating supplier to confirm.
|
|
|
Bleeding (spotted discolouration).
|
Solvent attack from an underlying coating.
|
Apply an intermediate tie-coat/blocking primer to affected area.
|
Ensure compatibility of tie-coat/blocking primer with subsequent coatings.
|
|
Blistering (blisters or bubbles in the paint).
|
Liquid vapour gas under or within the paint film.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
Ensure complete removal of cause of blister, e.g. salts, acid.
|
|
Blooming (dull patches on the surface).
|
Condensation forming on partially cured coating – often when temperatures drop significantly during the first phase of curing.
|
Lightly abrade and apply another coat, allowing it to cure in warmer and drier conditions.
|
Blooming generally affects just the aesthetics of a coating and its performance is otherwise unaffected.
|
|
Chalking (white, chalky powder on the surface).
|
Exposure to harsh environment or UV light. Age of coating.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Cissing (freshly applied paint recedes from the surface leaving small craters or bare areas).
|
The usual cause is contamination of the surface by grease, oil, wax, silicone etc. Cissing can also occur when overcoating glossy surfaces with no preparation.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Cracking (cracked/flaky paint).
|
Curing rates, age of coating, what the coating was applied over.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat
|
|
|
Cratering (small, round recesses/depressions).
|
Air entrapment, gas release, solvent release, bubbles bursting.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat
|
|
|
Runs, tears, sags, curtains (sag over a significant length).
|
Applicator’s coating technique resulting in over application and coating applied too thickly.
|
If coating still wet, spread out the coating. If dry, remove/abrade and reapply.
|
A wet film thickness (WFT) gauge will help apply future coats to the correct thickness, using the coating’s technical data sheet as a guide.
|
|
Dry spray (dull appearance and rough surface).
|
Incorrect spraying technique. Ambient weather conditions unsuitable, e.g. too hot.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
Failure to remove a ‘dry spray’ primer will result in poor intercoat adhesion.
|
|
Flaking (lifting of the coating in the form of flakes or scales).
|
Adhesion failure due to contamination and poor surface preparation, or the overcoating time was exceeded.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Flocculation (signs of small lumps in surface).
|
Possibly an issue with the paint itself.
|
Contact coating supplier with batch number to validate.
|
|
|
Grinning (visibility of the surface due to insufficient opacity of the paint).
|
Insufficient coating applied.
|
Apply further coating.
|
Establish the manufacturer’s recommended overcoating time and abrasion specification before overcoating.
|
|
Grit inclusions (fine particles in the paint).
|
Surface preparation undertaken too closely to painted areas. Surface not clean prior to application.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
Avoid recurrence by painting in a cleaner, enclosed area.
|
|
Holidays (gaps in the coating surface).
|
Poor application technique. Difficult access to areas being coated.
|
Prepare uncoated areas and apply further material.
|
|
|
Lifting (softening, swelling or separation of a coat after a second coat is applied).
|
Material drying too quickly. Solvent incompatible with existing paint. Overcoated too quickly.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Orange peel (textured imperfection).
|
Poor application technique. Incorrect coating viscosity.
|
Correct the technique and/or adjust equipment.
|
If using a roller, try a shorter pile to not hold so much paint.
|
|
Pinholing/rust spotting (small holes in the paint surface, often with rust spots showing through).
|
Contamination. Gas/solvent release possibly due to further coats being applied too soon.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Residual tack (coating is still tacky).
|
Insufficient drying time. Low temperatures during drying time. Insufficient ventilation. If using a 2-pack incorrect mix ratio.
|
Allow full curing time as per the coating’s technical data sheet.
|
|
|
Ropiness (brush marks have not flowed out).
|
Material used outside of open time.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat.
|
|
|
Saponification (patches peeling from the surface).
|
Alkaline deposits remaining on the substrate
|
Remove affected area down to the bare metal substrate, remove contamination, re-prepare and re-coat.
|
|
|
Wrinkling (the paint film shrinks, causing a wave-like appearance).
|
Incompatibility of solvents with previous coats. Over-thick areas skinning. Wrong intercoating interval. Drying rates too fast.
|
Remove affected area down to a sound substrate and re-coat
|
|
|
Zinc salts (typically a white haze on the coating).
|
Exposure to environment.
|
Remove by hand abrasion followed by washing down, re-preparation and re-coat.
|
|