06YarisRS
04-21-2020, 12:54 AM
Since I had a bit of 2K epoxy primer let from my wheel restoration, I thought I do a little rotor painting experiment. I've had a set of rotors for the Yaris sitting on the shelf forever. These cars never seem to need new rotors. :iono:
Anyway, I degreased them really well and then shot them with a couple coats of the primer. This epoxy is supposed to hold to metal like nobody's business. I then topped it with 3 coats of VHT Flameproof ceramic paint.
The reason I call it an 'experiment' is that I really have no idea how much heat epoxy can take. I know of the G2 epoxy kit for calipers but they don't get nearly as hot as the rotors themselves. I know that the VHT paint can handle the extreme heat, but what it can't do is hang on to the rotor for very long. I does not adhere very well.
I'll be surprised if this paint job lasts much longer than the summer, but maybe I'll be surprised. I'll remove the over spray from the contact surface with a razor blade before installing. I'm about to pull the trigger on a set of performance brake pads. I'm leaning toward the Hawk pads, but they're so dang expensive here in Canuk land. I can get the Powerstop z23 pads for a fair bit less.
On to the pics:
Epoxy Primer
https://i.imgur.com/aPBhk6i.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/MT8mXtx.jpg
VHT Paint
https://i.imgur.com/MEnzQ6C.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/diNQjld.jpg
Anyway, I degreased them really well and then shot them with a couple coats of the primer. This epoxy is supposed to hold to metal like nobody's business. I then topped it with 3 coats of VHT Flameproof ceramic paint.
The reason I call it an 'experiment' is that I really have no idea how much heat epoxy can take. I know of the G2 epoxy kit for calipers but they don't get nearly as hot as the rotors themselves. I know that the VHT paint can handle the extreme heat, but what it can't do is hang on to the rotor for very long. I does not adhere very well.
I'll be surprised if this paint job lasts much longer than the summer, but maybe I'll be surprised. I'll remove the over spray from the contact surface with a razor blade before installing. I'm about to pull the trigger on a set of performance brake pads. I'm leaning toward the Hawk pads, but they're so dang expensive here in Canuk land. I can get the Powerstop z23 pads for a fair bit less.
On to the pics:
Epoxy Primer
https://i.imgur.com/aPBhk6i.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/MT8mXtx.jpg
VHT Paint
https://i.imgur.com/MEnzQ6C.jpg
https://i.imgur.com/diNQjld.jpg