Subject: Paint for microfilm cabinets
"Baked enamel" should probably be avoided: this term actually means any paint which is heat cured, and is usually alkyd paint. I have an article from 1931 describing the corrosion of electrical wiring by alkyd paint; my old-fashioned painter tells me that only a fool would use alkyd paint around wiring. In 1980 I encountered significant corrosion on coins and medals in a damp vault painted with alkyd paint, and worked with a local paint company to develop a paint based on Rohm and Haas AC33 acrylic resin rather than alkyd resin. This seemed to work ok. One of our departments also ordered a large number of "end of fiscal year" cabinets which were spec-ed only as "baked enamel"...these arrived smelling highly of solvent, and the paint came off on a swab with Stoddard's Solvent (probably due to poor stoving). I installed metal test coupons, and, frustratingly, nothing happened for 18 months: little change in silver, copper, or lead. Then, suddenly, the lead turned into powder on the bottom of the case. Long induction time, I guess, but certainly an indication of the outgassing organic acid vapors generated by the drying oil base of alkyd paints. Even though you are not storing metals (except for the silver, of course), lead is our "canary" and indicates problems of acid outgassing sooner than most other materials. (I also saw an unusually high amount of textile fiber on the bottom of wooden textile drawers in these cases, but was not able to carry out thorough investigations--I do, however suspect gaseous acid attack on vegetable fiber textiles.) Since then Delta Design Cabinets in Topeka Kansas pioneered the use of powder paints. these have the advantage of not using solvent, which can take years to evaporate from a paint film, especially if the surface has been dried first with heat curing. It appears that these powder paints are available as polyester, epoxy, and a hybrid of the two. Skip Dickinson, the founder of Delta, chose the hybrid because it was the least uv sensitive (indicating a potential chemical instability, even if one does not expect to encounter uv in storage), but you would probably want to conduct your own investigations into the chemical stability of the powder paints available from local painters. Lisa Mibach *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:3 Distributed: Tuesday, June 21, 1994 Message Id: cdl-8-3-004 ***Received on Sunday, 19 June, 1994