• Steel Soldiers now has a few new forums, read more about it at: New Munitions Forums!

  • Microsoft MSN, Live, Hotmail, Outlook email users may not be receiving emails. We are working to resolve this issue. Please add support@steelsoldiers.com to your trusted contacts.

Painting cargo covers

kendelrio

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,677
8,648
113
Location
Alexandria, La
I haven't seen a thread devoted strictly to this yet... so...

I have a tan cargo cover that I'd really like to paint black, but my mind is telling me any paint I use will end up cracking etc if I roll up the sides or fold it.

Has anyone painted their covers? If so, how were the results? What paint would be best?

I know soft top roofs have/can be painted, but they don't have near the movement a cargo cover would.

I appreciate all and any info!
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,768
24,086
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
Depends on the material. When we got trucks back that had been painted by a "Real" paint shop, the canvas did not do well. But the rubber/plastic cover held the paint much better.
 

Mullaney

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
Supporting Vendor
7,716
19,766
113
Location
Charlotte NC
I haven't seen a thread devoted strictly to this yet... so...

I have a tan cargo cover that I'd really like to paint black, but my mind is telling me any paint I use will end up cracking etc if I roll up the sides or fold it.

Has anyone painted their covers? If so, how were the results? What paint would be best?

I know soft top roofs have/can be painted, but they don't have near the movement a cargo cover would.

I appreciate all and any info!
.
Wonder if there is some sort of dye that would do the job? Especially going from a light color to a darker color. Long years ago, I think NAPA had some sort of dye that would color the seats and dash in a car or truck.
 

kendelrio

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
2,677
8,648
113
Location
Alexandria, La
.
Wonder if there is some sort of dye that would do the job? Especially going from a light color to a darker color. Long years ago, I think NAPA had some sort of dye that would color the seats and dash in a car or truck.
I'm going to research it. My main question is what material are they made of? That would be a determining factor I guess.
 

CMPPhil

Well-known member
536
376
63
Location
Temple, NH
Hi

In your experiment track how much paint, thinner, etc you use. So that you can figure the cost. Painting vinyl it may not be bad, but if you are paintings canvas you maybe surprised at how much paint will be needed to change color. I tried paintings a Cordura tarp with flexible dupont truck paint a gallon just disappeared into the fabric.

Cheers Phil
 

silverstate55

Unemployable
2,075
872
113
Location
UT
One and a half gallons of Behr exterior paint worked great on my Deuce’s cargo cover...UV-resistant and still holding after 6 or 7 years. Only cracking/peeling was around some of the more frequently-used tie-down corners but it’s hardly noticeable.
 

swbradley1

Modertator
Staff member
Super Moderator
Steel Soldiers Supporter
14,258
1,759
113
Location
Dayton, OH
I would suggest Behr elastomeric paint. I use it for our house on the concrete block. It is designed for movement and filling cracks and remaining flexible.

Never tried it on a cover but when I'm done this week maybe I can slap some on a piece of tan material. I'll forget so don't hold your breath. :-(
 

chucky

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
6,622
18,965
113
Location
TN .
OK, found this on the web:

"Military-grade tarp material is polyester and covered with a unique PVC coating."
I would get a piece of pvc pipe and just wipe it clean and start testing differant paints to see what will get hot enough to adhere to pvc or go by your local automotive paint supplier and see if they still use an additive in the paint when shooting plastic/rubber bumper covers to stick and bend without cracking years back they did but things might have changed my local paint man says epa has outlawed everything that make paint work in the last 2 yrs to where if your not gm ford or chyrsler shooting water based paint out of robots your screwed even the best paint stripper (Aircraft stripper) in the spray cans is now waterd down to crap .
 

Guyfang

Moderator
Staff member
Moderator
16,768
24,086
113
Location
Burgkunstadt, Germany
I would suggest Behr elastomeric paint. I use it for our house on the concrete block. It is designed for movement and filling cracks and remaining flexible.

Never tried it on a cover but when I'm done this week maybe I can slap some on a piece of tan material. I'll forget so don't hold your breath. :-(
Getting old?
 

Mullaney

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
Supporting Vendor
7,716
19,766
113
Location
Charlotte NC
G'day everyone,....


Stencils painted on canvas work just fine,....

So why would'nt it work?

View attachment 843531



Aussie.
.
Dang Aussie Bloke !

That is logical. So dang logical that all of us have completely overlooked that tiny bit of information...
Maybe this will be easier than it appears at first glance.
 

SCSG-G4

PSVB 3003
Steel Soldiers Supporter
5,368
3,378
113
Location
Lexington, South Carolina
Most of the time, stencils on canvas are ink, not paint. I have used the white 'cool seal' elastometric paint on a deuce cab cover with success. If it already has holes in it simply lay a piece of cloth over the hole and paint, let it dry and put another coat of paint on, then repeat once more. That puts two layers of paint over the cloth patch. Overcoat with whatever color you desire and roll on!
 

Mullaney

Well-known member
Steel Soldiers Supporter
Supporting Vendor
7,716
19,766
113
Location
Charlotte NC
What kind of paint? Is it even paint? I agree, should work. But I do not think it is paint.
.
I keep thinking that I remember a cloth / plastic seat dye. Hard part is not remembering what it was called 40 years ago. I feel sure that if I could figure that out, we could dress up almost anything.
 

GTUnit

Active member
123
153
43
Location
CA
The current LMTV cargo covers are not straight canvas. The canvas is coated in PVC so the surface you are dealing with is only PVC.\
The thickness of the coating will have a big impact on adhesion affected by flexing. Super thin dry spray of a number will flex fine since its already a broken up collection of fine spots instead of a continuous coating that like one applies when it goes on wet and flows out.

Maybe this stuff:

If you use and normal paints i would dust it on and not let it flow out. And prep the crap out of the surface with degreasers.


tarp2).jpgtarp1.jpg
 
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website like our supporting vendors. Their ads help keep Steel Soldiers going. Please consider disabling your ad blockers for the site. Thanks!

I've Disabled AdBlock
No Thanks