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SPECIALTY FUNCTION COATING SYSTEMS: SELECTING AND SOURCING A JPCL eResource jpcl PAINTSQUARE.COM JOURNAL OF PROTECTIVE COATINGS & LININGS

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SPECIALTY FUNCTION COATING SYSTEMS:

SELECTING AND SOURCING

A JPCL eResource

jpclP A I N T S Q U A R E . C O M J O U R N A L O F P R O T E C T I V E C O A T I N G S & L I N I N G S

i

Specialty Function Coating Systems:

Selecting and SourcingA JPCL eBook

Copyright 2013 byTechnology Publishing Company2100 Wharton Street, Suite 310

Pittsburgh, PA 15203

All Rights Reserved

This eBook may not be copied or redistributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Introduction

The “No Big Bang” Theory: An Introduction to Risk-BasedInspection Systems for Mitigating CUI in Process Equipment Pipingby Peter Bock, Capital Inspectors

Coating System Guide for Specialty Functions

Coating Company Profiles

Contents

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SPONSORED BY

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1

12

16

Contents

iv

Introduction

Photos courtesy of Sherwin-Williams

Introduction

This eBook consists of an article published in the Journal of Protective Coatings & Linings (JPCL) on inspecting heat-resistantcoatings and corrosion under insulation, as well as JPCL BuyingGuide material on selecting and specifying coatings for a varietyof specialty functions. All information is based on the originaldates of publication of these materials in JPCL.

The Buying Guide is organized by specialty functions, such asanti-graffiti coatings, fire-resistive coatings, and heat-resistantcoatings. Then, coating manufacturers are listed in alphabeticalorder, with each company’s preferred system named in bothproprietary and generic terms. Finally, contact details are givenfor all the companies.

This collection is designed to provide general guidance on selecting and specifying coatings for specialty functions, andthen to give sources for acquiring the appropriate systems. Author information and company information are based on thedates of original publication of these materials.

1

Editor’s Note: This article first appearedin JPCL in August 2013.

By Peter Bock,Capital Inspectors

T H E “ N O B I G B A N G T H E O R Y ”

An Introduction to Risk-Based Inspection Systems for Mitigating CUI in Process Equipment and Piping

Fig. 1a: (left) Vertical processvessel after complete reblastand recoat with thermalspray aluminum. Thermalspray is used under insula-tion on large, flat, easy-to-access surfaces.Fig. 1b: (below) Verticalprocess vessel coated withthermal spray aluminumafter insulation and claddinghave been replaced, and be-fore removal of scaffolding.Photos courtesy of The DowChemical Company, St. Charles Operations,

2

Fig. 2a: Sphere being abrasiveblasted prior to recoating and re-insulation. Maximum operating temperatures are lowenough that an epoxy system canbe used.

S teelwork at all levels of industry in the United States is corroding

despite our best efforts to stop it.1 Unexpected atmospheric corrosion

damage (including corrosion under insulation—CUI) causes tens of

billions of dollars in losses annually from unanticipated shutdowns of

equipment; loss of production; unplanned maintenance; unexpected cleanup

costs; and, in more severe cases, damage to adjacent equipment, injuries to

operating personnel or surrounding residents, toxic chemical releases, envi-

ronmental damage, and other long-term effects. Moreover, this unexpected

corrosion damage affects everything from the largest and most sophisticated

refineries down to small local waterworks and sewage plants. While the

damage can take many forms, one of the most challenging is CUI, the focus of

this article. Our news media regularly report “big bangs”—fires, explosions,

chemical spills, toxic releases and other similar “events.” Many of these are

caused by CUI.

CUI is as likely to be found on the boiler feed

lines in a local hospital or food processing plant

as in a coal-fired electrical generating plant or a

major petrochemical facility, where hot process

equipment and pipeline are common. The larger

and more complex a manufacturing facility is,

the more likely it is to suffer from CUI and un-

expected atmospheric corrosion damage. In ad-

dition, the larger and more complex a plant is,

the more likely it is that a corrosion-related fail-

ure during operation will have major conse-

quences. Chemical and petrochemical plants

can be quite complex, and the damage to them

(and the surrounding area) from CUI can be

quite severe because CUI is usually well under

way before it is detected. Unfortunately, it is

often “detected” after it has caused significant

damage. Finding CUI before the damage occurs

is challenging. This article describes using risk-

based inspection (RBI) to detect and mitigate

CUI in chemical and petrochemical process

equipment and pipeline before severe damage

is done. The article also illustrates a successful

in-house CUI-RBI program in Figs. 1a and 1b;

Figs. 2a, 2b, 2c, and 2d; and Fig. 3.

CUI: The Back StoryMost oil refining and petrochemical manufac-

turing processes are simply advanced forms of

cooking—crude oil or intermediate chemicals

are “cooked,” heated under specific conditions

or in specific temperature and pressure envi-

ronments, to produce more desirable end prod-

ucts. Process vessels and piping are usually

insulated to conserve process heat and reduce

the fuel required, to reduce process tempera-

ture variations, to stabilize stored intermediates

or end products, and to protect workers from

exposure to hot equipment. Insulation is nor-

mally covered with unpainted aluminum or

stainless steel sheet metal “cladding” to protect

3

Fig. 2b: Newly applied epoxy primerand stripe coats on the sphere. Each

step of the coating applicationprocess is closely inspected before

the next step is allowed to start.

the fragile insulation.

It is this sheet metal cladding over insulated

piping and vessels that gives a refinery or chem-

ical plant’s process units a shiny, misleading

“good-to-go” appearance. But don’t be fooled—

beneath that shiny exterior cladding and the in-

sulation it covers, there usually beats a hidden

heart of rusty steel. And in many cases, no one

has any idea of how rusty the steel really is.

Once corrosion eats into the steel, wall thick-

ness is lost, and the vessel or pipe is no longer

capable of resisting the temperature and pres-

sure it was originally rated for. Normally, there

is a “corrosion allowance” of extra thickness in

the steel. When the thickness of corrosion ex-

ceeds this allowance, the pipe or vessel becomes

unsafe. If corrosion continues, cracking, leakage,

or catastrophic failure during operation be-

comes more and more likely.

Until the 1970s, carbon steel under insula-

tion for elevated temperature service was often

left unpainted. It was thought that the high op-

erating temperatures would keep the steel from

rusting, and there were no effective paints for

high temperatures. There were two major prob-

lems with this concept.

1. Nothing stays hot forever—most elevated

temperature equipment actually cycles hot-

cold fairly frequently. Even equipment that

runs hot almost continuously is cooled down

for maintenance turnarounds and corrodes

during those “cool” times if not protected.

2. CUI is normally invisible. The insulation and

cladding hide the steel, and even if it was prop-

erly painted with a temperature-resistant

coating, there is usually no quick and inex-

pensive way to check that the coating is pro-

tecting the steel. To make matters worse, most

cladding leaks, and most insulation holds

water to some degree, so the steel under insu-

lation is exposed to a severe immersion cor-

rosion environment whenever it is operating

below the boiling point of water.

Today, there are effective coating systems

available for elevated temperature CUI service,

but problems 1 and 2 continue.2 Corrosion

under insulation tends to be invisible, and no

coating system gives 100% protection for tens

4

of years under such severe conditions.

The cost of removing cladding and insula-

tion is time consuming and very expensive; re-

placing cladding and insulation is even more

expensive. Most insulated equipment receives

only periodic spot checks of tiny areas during

normal operation. Most of the steel under in-

sulation is not seen for the expected life of the

coating system or the expected life of the un-

coated steel. When the “expected life”

matches real life, cladding and insulation are

removed, and the steel beneath is inspected,

re-prepared, re-coated, re-insulated, and re-

clad. But real life becomes much shorter than

“expected life” and catastrophes can occur

when unexpected moisture or chemical con-

taminants get beneath the insulation; when

the steel is damaged; or when operating con-

ditions change, allowing increased corrosion

under the insulation.

The currently circulating draft of API RP

583, “Corrosion Under Insulation and Fire-

proofing,” lists nearly a dozen different elec-

tronic methods of checking remaining wall

thickness of insulated and clad steel pipe or

vessels.3 These methods range from simple X-

rays to complex real-time systems using the

latest nuclear technology. Many of these

methods do not require the insulation and

cladding to be removed while doing the elec-

tronic testing, but none has been found reli-

able enough to completely eliminate removal

of insulation and cladding and visual inspec-

tion of the surface at problem areas indicated

by the electronic test.

Risk-Based Inspection Systems for CUI Other than the expense of removing and re-

placing cladding and insulation, a large part of

the reason for unexpected atmospheric corro-

sion damage from CUI or other sources is a

lack of qualified plant inspection personnel

and a lack of planning. All U.S. industries now

run with extremely lean staffs of qualified per-

sonnel. Even some major refineries and chem-

ical plants may have only one corrosion

manager or corrosion engineer, and a few tech-

nicians at most. Moreover, the corrosion engi-

neer is usually in charge of all types of

corrosion mitigation, not just atmospheric cor-

rosion or CUI and not just mitigation through

protective coatings.

Mid-sized facilities may have only a mainte-

nance manager or maintenance engineer, for

whom corrosion mitigation is only a secondary

duty. Very few successful, cost-effective facili-

ties have enough people, time, and money in

their maintenance budget to do thorough, com-

plete CUI inspections regularly without outside

help. Because of their limited staffing and budg-

ets, smaller plants may actually operate on an

“inspection by perforation” philosophy, which

can be costly and dangerous.

One effective (and cost-effective) method of

CUI mitigation that has been known and used

successfully for a couple of decades is a Risk-

Based Inspection (RBI) Program. Unfortunately,

RBI is a complex program that requires support

and cooperation of the entire company, from

top-level management to field-unit operators.

Initial setup of an RBI program requires exten-

sive in-house work, a fairly generous budget,

and lots of time even for just the insulated pip-

ing and equipment in a plant.4

Operation of a successful RBI program also

requires a multi-year commitment. For CUI-RBI,

a successful program may require a multi-

decade commitment because scheduled major

maintenance programs on insulated piping and

equipment can be at 10- to 15-year intervals.

Many companies shy away from setting up

meaningful RBI programs because the programs

seem too complicated and too costly, the time

horizons are beyond the companies’ normal

planning ranges, and the companies’ plants do

not have skilled people or budgets big enough to

do the required initial baseline surveys.

5

Setting Up an RBI ProgramSetting up an RBI program requires an initial

investment of time and thought by the com-

pany’s top management, who need to identify

their company’s concept of “risk” and to rank

their company’s sensitivity (and aversion) to the

different types and levels of risk they may en-

counter in operating their plants. Fortunately,

this type of assessment needs to be done only

once for the entire company, or, at most, once

for each type of operating unit and possibly

each country the company operates in.

The Exploration and Production, Americas,

division of one global oil and petrochemical pro-

ducer has worked with the RBI concept for

more than two decades. On the one hand, the

division has distilled the basic concept and phi-

losophy of RBI into a simplified matrix printed

on two sides of one sheet of paper. On the other

hand, the petrochemical division of the same

company has expanded it to a level where, for

some process units in its South Louisiana petro-

chemical plants, every valve, every flange, and

sometimes even every set of bolts and nuts

have been analyzed and given an individual

“criticality” rating and inspection frequency re-

quirement. We can draw on both divisions’ use

of the matrix to amplify our discussion of set-

ting up an RBI program.

Producing a Risk Assessment Evaluation re-

quires identification of potential events and their

potential consequences, estimating their poten-

tial severity and likelihood, and then estimating

the level of risk based on the combination of

severity and likelihood of the event happening.

A Risk Assessment Evaluation is required for

every location. For the exploration and produc-

tion division of our model company, “location” is

defined as the smallest individual unit assessed,

down to each production platform offshore or

each flow station onshore. For a refinery or

petrochemical plant, a “location” may be defined

as one production unit within a larger plant, or

even one specialized portion of the plant (such

as “raw materials storage and handling”).

A simplified typical Risk Assessment Evalu-

ation Chart (Table 1) examines possible conse-

quences of an unexpected event and their effect

on the following.

•Neighbors: People, buildings, and land in the

area of the affected plant

•Equipment in the plant itself

•Environment both in the immediate area and

in general

•Reputation of the owner or parent company,

locally and worldwide

Severity of consequences is rated from

Zero—No injuries, no damage, no environmen-

tal or reputation effect—to Five—Multiple fa-

talities, massive damage to the facility, and a

Table 1: Risk Assessment Evaluation Chart INCREASING LIKELIHOOD OF AN EVENT >>>>

EFFECTS OF AN EVENT ON: A B C D EPossible Possible Has Occasionally Frequently

NEIGHBORS EQUIPMENT ENVIRONMENT REPUTATION But Unlikely Occurred Occurs Occurs

(0) No Injuries No Damage No Effect No Effect

(1) Minimal Injuries Minimal Damage Detectable Effect Short-Term Local Effect RISK >

(2) Few minor injuries Easily Repaired Damage Measurable Effect Short-Term Regional Effect >>>

(3) Hospitalizations Serious Damage Slight Short-Term Effect Longer, Regional Effect >>>>>

(4) Death Long-Term Damage Serious Short-Term Effect National Effect >>>>>>>

(5) Multiple Deaths Total Loss Long-Term Effect Long-Term National Effect >>>>>>>>>

INCREASES

6

huge long-term impact on the environment and

on the company’s reputation.

A “Serious” effect, Three on the conse-

quences scale, would be an event that produces

many days of absence from work for affected

employees, or that results in long-term disabil-

ities; a release of large amounts of crude oil or

of any reportable quantity of a hazardous

chemical; an event that triggers an environ-

mental fine; an event that incurs very high re-

pair and mitigation costs; or an event that

causes partial shutdown of a facility and gen-

erates extensive regional media coverage.

The likelihood of such an event occurring is

also rated in five steps, from “Possible but un-

likely,” as the lowest rating to “Occurs Fre-

quently” for the most likely to occur. A simple

chart of severity versus likelihood of an event

produces the risk rating for that particular

event. The higher the likelihood of an event is

and the more serious its consequences are, the

more closely and more frequently the equip-

ment involved must be monitored to keep the

potential event from happening.

The purpose of the RBI program is to reduce

all such risks to a minimum “ALAP” (“As Low

As Practical”), that is, to a level at which the

cost and effort of further risk reduction are un-

affordable or disproportionate to the risk re-

duction achieved. Once the Risk Assessment

for all potential events has been completed, the

actual evaluation of operating equipment be-

gins in order to determine the required Risk

Based Inspection process for assuring that op-

eration of the equipment will not produce neg-

ative events beyond the “ALAP” level.

The second half of an initial RBI assessment

involves personnel actually operating and

maintaining the equipment being rated. These

are the people who actually live with the equip-

ment day-in and day-out; they are most quali-

fied to identify portions of the unit or piece of

equipment most likely to fail, and whose failure

is most likely to cause damage. They also are

most likely to know what coincidental or col-

lateral damage one failure might cause to other

parts of the plant. This process allows a whole

series of possible “events” to be evaluated from

each potential failure.

Plant maintenance records and equipment

Fig. 2c: Epoxy topcoat of the sphere.After the epoxy had passed

inspection and was fully cured to accept insulation, the sphere was

insulated and cladding was installed.

7

design blueprints are analyzed to determine the

portions or pieces of equipment most likely to

corrode and cause an “event.” Then, potential

events are rated for their effect on plant opera-

tion and production, and the same potential

events are rated against the company’s Risk As-

sessment charts.

This initial survey can be done by outside

consultants, but, ultimately, it is the plant oper-

ating personnel who are familiar enough with

plant components to know which are the most

likely to fail, and local plant management who

are best able to determine what and how severe

damage such a failure will cause.

Commitment to an RBI ProgramThe engineer or manager chosen to design and

implement a CUI-RBI program faces a daunting

task. First, he or she must be assured of buy-in

from upper management and from the field peo-

ple who will be doing the site evaluation. After

everyone understands and agrees that an RBI

program is a multi-year, continuing effort, not a

one-time inspection, there comes the question of

return on investment (ROI). On the one hand, the

initial survey and risk assessment are expensive

and time-consuming. On the other hand, pre-

venting one “Moderate” event from the Risk

Evaluation chart can mean a savings of

$1,000,000; preventing a “Major” event can save

ten times as much. In comparison, the cost of the

initial plant RBI survey may seem reasonable.

For a refinery or oil production facilities, and

for many petrochemical plants, the in-plant

risks—such as a vapor cloud explosion, petro-

leum jet fire, petroleum pool fire, or major toxics

release—can all do grievous harm to the plant, to

the surrounding environment, and to the com-

pany’s bottom line as well as to its reputation.

The in-plant survey needs to identify specific

high-risk areas or pieces of equipment whose

failure might raise the severity of consequences

on the “Equipment” column of the risk chart. Of

course, such equipment should already be

closely monitored as part of the plant mainte-

nance program, but identifying (or re-identify-

ing) key high-risk items helps the RBI initial

survey become a defined risk-mitigation process.

Existing plant data on performance of unit

vessels, piping, operating equipment, controls,

and even electrical and electronic sub-systems

can be used to develop an RBI continuing in-

spection schedule and calculate its expected

cost in terms of dollars per square foot or dol-

Fig. 2d: After work is complete andscaffolding has been removed, thenewly recoated, insulated and cladsphere is seen at the left of the pic-ture in the plant’s sphere tank area.

8

Service LifeSystem Required Repair

Clad, insulated, uncoated bare steel(Lose entire wall thickness corrosion allowance) 6 years; 100% re-do

Clad, insulated, organic coating without abrasive blast(Lose entire coating system, portion of wall thickness) 12 years; 100% re-do

Clad, insulated, organic coating with SSPC-SP 10 abrasive blast(Lose portion of coating system, portion of wall thickness) 16 years; 100% re-do

Clad, insulated, thermal spray aluminum with SSPC-SP 5 abrasive blast(Lose small portion of TSA, small portion of wall thickness) 40 years; 25% re-do

Table 2: Expected Service Life Performance of Typical CUI Systems

lars per linear foot of pipe per year of the RBI

program. Remaining service life of an older unit,

expected upgrades or replacement, and the part

one unit plays in the overall operation of the

plant all need to be evaluated against the risk

evaluation for that particular unit.

Once data is collected, the proposed RBI pro-

gram needs to be prioritized, based on highest

possible event consequences, age and replace-

ment cost of equipment, turnaround schedules,

and the ability to incorporate the RBI program

into existing inspection procedures (if any

exist). Because there is not enough budget for

100% frequent inspection of all insulated areas,

a priority ranking program is set up, with the

“riskiest” vessels, piping, and equipment re-

ceiving the most frequent and most thorough

spot inspections, and lower-risk equipment

being inspected less often, or with less of the in-

sulation and cladding actually removed as part

of the scheduled inspection. Lowest-risk or no-

risk equipment may receive only the minimum

required electronic wall thickness tests annu-

ally. Some critical refinery areas may require

100% removal of cladding and insulation and

100% visual inspection.

A key factor in the frequency of visual in-

spections is the equipment owner’s confidence

in the CUI coating systems used on equipment

included in the CUI RBI program. Where quality

surface preparation, a suitable proven coating

system, good application, and thorough inspec-

tion have been done on equipment under insu-

lation, the number of inspection spots may be

reduced to areas of known breakdown, and the

inspection intervals may be extended. Table 2

shows a major global petrochemical company’s

“confidence level” for length of service life of

coatings under insulation, where operating tem-

peratures never exceed the maximum service

temperature of the applied coating system.5

Continuing the RBI ProgramAfter the base plant (or unit) RBI survey has

been done, and the risks and hazards have been

agreed upon, quantified, and ranked by plant

personnel, then the actual annual (or otherwise

recurrent) field surveys can be done by an out-

side survey firm that has experienced, qualified

inspectors, and follows the base survey. Many

existing RBI programs actually combine elec-

tronic non-destructive testing (NDT) with insu-

lation and cladding removal and visual

inspection of selected small areas. Both parts of

the survey may be done by the same firm, or

NDT can be done by a specialist, and the results

can be verified by a paint inspection company.

The findings of these recurrent surveys are

summarized in electronic format, incorporating

electronic testing results, digital photographs,

9

Fig. 3: Five-year-old liquid-appliedelevated temperature coating ex-posed for RBI inspection. Liquid-ap-plied coating is used underinsulation on complex or hard-to-reach surfaces.

and the field contract inspector’s “eyeball on the

steel” evaluations. The plant’s corrosion engi-

neer or maintenance manager now can exam-

ine the corrosion state of his facility on a

computer monitor in his or her office, at his or

her convenience. Management personnel can

review the survey results, match them against

expected results based on the initial RBI survey,

and decide on an appropriate course of action.

In simplified form, the recurrent RBI survey

can have four possible results for a particular

unit or piece of equipment.

• Less corrosion is found than was expected.

This result is noted in the survey. If the result is

found to repeat in the next scheduled survey of

this unit, the unit or piece of equipment may be

re-evaluated for lower risk or less frequent in-

spection. Some owners also use such a finding

to re-evaluate related equipment, working on

the sound theory that if one unit or piece of

equipment is rusting less than expected, some-

thing else related to the equipment may be act-

ing as an anode and rusting more than expected.

• Corrosion is as expected. The survey is sub-

mitted and repeated as scheduled.

• A small increase in corrosion is noted over ex-

pectation. Additional portions of the unit are in-

spected at the same time to confirm the increase

in corrosion. For CUI work, inspecting addi-

tional portions means removing additional small

areas of cladding and insulation. The unit or area

is marked, and the next scheduled re-inspection

will determine whether unscheduled corrosion-

preventive maintenance may be necessary.

• A large or unexpected increase in corrosion is

noted. Additional portions of the unit are in-

spected at the same time to confirm the increase

in corrosion, and plant personnel are brought in

to try to determine a cause. Budget and schedul-

ing are rearranged to give priority to corrosion-

preventive maintenance on this unit or piece of

equipment. The recurrent survey schedule is re-

arranged to closely monitor this problem until

corrosion-preventive maintenance is done, and

then afterward to determine whether the main-

tenance resolved the problem.

10

RBI programs for plants with large amounts

of insulated piping and equipment require ad-

ditional input during the initial set-up of the

program to assure that the spots selected for re-

current survey are actually representative of

the “worst case” areas of each unit or piece of

equipment. The first few recurrent surveys

done by a contract inspection or survey firm

may actually include additional, redundant spot

inspection points, which can be phased out later

if survey results are as expected. Where elec-

tronic testing or thermal imaging produces reli-

able results and matches destructive spot

testing over several recurrent survey cycles,

the destructive testing spots may be reduced,

thereby reducing the overall survey costs with-

out affecting reliability.

Figures 1-3 that accompany this article show

an in-house RBI program in action at a petro-

chemical plant in South Louisiana. The facility is

an older plant, but equipment is meticulously

maintained, and a very thorough RBI program

is in place. Sections of insulated piping, vessels,

and equipment are inspected annually on a ro-

tating basis, with a typical section being re-in-

spected every three years on average. The plant

uses a combination of organic coatings and ther-

mal spray aluminum for CUI work; annual sur-

vey results tend to confirm the plant’s RBI base

surveys and the service life expectations for the

systems used. Confidence is high that the CUI-

RBI program is working as it should.

A Houston-area industrial gas facility, which

produces various gases by cryogenically refrig-

erating air and then separating its components,

has an entirely different approach to RBI for

the company’s piping for transfer, storage, and

loading. The facility doesn’t do any RBI. Analy-

sis of maintenance and operating records on

these low-temperature piping systems in the

plant has shown that failures are always due to

cracking of piping in cyclic service from cryo-

genic to ambient temperatures. A failed pipe is

quickly discovered through unexpected pres-

sure loss; the insulation and cladding over the

pipe act as an effective containment over the

ruptured pipe; and the only loss is of the prod-

uct in the pipe, which, as a gas component of air,

is inherently non-polluting.

The plant has been designed to allow effective

isolation of failed pipe run sections, so when such

a failure occurs, the affected pipe run is shut in,

insulation and cladding are removed, and the

failed pipe section is replaced. Loss of product

and loss of productivity are minimal. The plant

runs several parallel air separation trains, so the

downtime required to replace a fractured length

of pipe in the transfer, storage, and loading piping

produces only a small reduction in plant output

and does not require other shutdowns. Corpo-

rate management has determined that for these

portions of the plant, this policy of neglect pres-

ents low enough risk and is more cost effective

than an intense RBI program.

ConclusionUnfortunately, a great deal of corrosion-mitiga-

tion plant maintenance, both for CUI and for at-

mospheric corrosion damage, is done reactively,

rather than proactively. There is an “Oh Sh**”

moment that comes in almost every unsched-

uled CUI inspection. That’s when the plant cor-

rosion engineer or maintenance manager looks

at the large area of newly exposed corroding

steel where insulation and cladding were re-

moved after serious corrosion was seen in a

smaller exposed area, and the engineer says

“Oh Sh**. Fixing this is going to take my entire

maintenance budget for the year.”

For these plants, CUI repair work is scheduled

and done only after a serious problem is unex-

pectedly found. This work often involves un-

scheduled shutdowns; loss of production;

manufacturing bottlenecks or backlogs; and, oc-

casionally, even fires, explosions, or toxic prod-

uct releases. This maintenance process is

unnecessarily costly and can be easily im-

proved. Improvement requires only a small in-

11

crease in budgets and no long-term increase in

plant personnel, using RBI with an initial survey

by plant personnel and recurrent inspections by

outside contract inspectors or surveyors.

Although commitment to a CUI-RBI program

requires a substantial initial investment of time

and effort, and a multi-year continuing com-

mitment, the relative security, peace of mind,

and confidence in the plant corrosion state offer

a positive return on investment even before fac-

toring in the cost savings of not having an un-

expected event that might shut down the plant,

pollute the neighborhood, and irreparably in-

jure the company’s reputation.

References1. George F. Hays, P. E., “Now is the Time,”

White Paper, World Corrosion Organization,

Houston, TX, corrosion.org, 2007.

2. “Control of Corrosion Under Thermal In-

sulation and Fireproofing Materials, a Sys-

tems Approach,” NACE SP 0198-2010,

NACE International, Houston, TX,

nace.org, 2010.

3. “Corrosion Under insulation and Fireproof-

ing,” Currently circulating draft of API RP583,

First Edition, First Ballot, American Petroleum

Institute, Washington, DC, api.org, 2012.

4. Keith E. McKinney, Fred J. M. Busch, Andre

Blaauw, Andrea M. Etheridge, “Development

of Risk Assessment and Inspection Strategies

For External Corrosion Management,” Paper

No. 05557, NACE Corrosion 2005, NACE In-

ternational, Houston, TX, nace.org, 2005.

5. William C. McRae and Nalton Thompson,

“CUI Project Development,” Bring on the Heat

2013, NACE International, Houston, TX,

nace.org, 2013.

About the authorPeter Bock is Inspection Sales Manager for CapitalInspectors, The Woodlands, TX. He is an AirForce veteran and hasdegrees from Tulaneand the University ofNorthern Colorado.Bock has 36 years ofexperience with sales,management, and tech-nical service in oilfieldand petrochemicalheavy-duty coatings inthe U.S., Canada, Mex-ico, Venezuela, Indonesia, and Taiwan. He has ex-perience with on- and offshore production, drillingand workover rigs, shipyard work, natural gasand LNG, pipelines, terminals, refineries, andchemical plants. He is a specialist in elevated tem-perature systems and CUI mitigation.The author gives special thanks for the photo-

graphs to Mr. Lawrence "Joe" Bordelon, SeniorCoatings & Linings Technologist, Site SME/Tech-nical Support/Paint Operations, Global Paint/Linings TRN Member, The Dow Chemical Com-pany, St. Charles Operations.

ABRI IndustriesUrban CleanInorganic Zinc/Epoxy/Urethane (Color & Clear)

Andek CorporationPolagard AGOrganic Zinc/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Coatings For Industry, Inc.UrethabondOrganic Zinc/Epoxy/Urethane (Color & Clear)

CSL Silicones Inc.Si-Coat 531Epoxy (1-2 Coats)/Fluoropolymer

Euclid Chemical CompanyEucothaneEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop/Graffiti MaxEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Induron Coatings, Inc.Indurethane AGEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Precision Coatings Inc.PC3 Anti GraffitiEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintClovaMastic/ArmourshieldEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Sherwin-WilliamsMacropoxy 646/2K WB Urethane AntigraffitiEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-441 SystemEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Tnemec Company, Inc.Tneme-Zinc/Hi-Bld Epoxoline II/FluoronarZinc Rich Primer/Fluoropolymer

US Coating SolutionsAGS Anti-GraffitiEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Wasser CorporationWasserOrganic Zinc/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Watson Coatings, Inc.ArmorexEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Wilko Paint, Inc.Wilkothane "S"Epoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Anti-GraffitiConcreteABRI IndustriesUrban CleanInorganic Zinc/Epoxy/Urethane (Color & Clear)

Andek CorporationPolagard AGOrganic Zinc/Epoxy/Urethane (Color & Clear)

Coatings For Industry, Inc.UrethabondEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

CSL Silicones Inc.Si-Coat 531Epoxy (1-2 Coats)/Fluoropolymer

Euclid Chemical CompanyEucothaneEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop/Graffiti MaxEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Gemite Products Inc.Graffiti-Shield WA STEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Induron Coatings, Inc.Indurethane AGEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Industrial Coatings & SealantsBD ClassicEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Precision Coatings Inc.PC3 Anti GraffitiEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Rock-Tred CorporationChem-Thane WBEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintClovaMastic/ArmourshieldEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Sherwin-WilliamsKem Cati-Coat / 2K WB Urethane AntigraffitiEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-441 SystemEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Textured Coatings of AmericaGraffiti Gard IVEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

3M Electrical Markets DivisionScotchkoteEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

US Coating SolutionsAGS Anti-GraffitiInorganic Zinc/Epoxy/Urethane (Color & Clear)

Wasser CorporationWasserOrganic Zinc/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Watson Coatings, Inc.ArmorexEpoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Wilko Paint, Inc.Wilkothane "S"Epoxy/Urethane (Color)/Urethane (Clear)

Fire-Resistive Coatings Fire Resistance up to 4 Hours (UL1709 Rating)Steel

Carboline CompanyThermo-LagThick-Film Intumescent

Celufibre Industries Inc.HiBARSprayed Fibers

Cote-L Industries Inc.CeasefireThin-Film Intumescent

Anti-GraffitiSteel

SPONSORED BY

Listings are alphabetized by company name.

Coating System Guide for Specialty Functions

12

Photos courtesy of Sherwin-Williams

HJ3 Composite TechnologiesHJ3 CarbonSeal Industrial SystemsCementitious

International Paint LLCInternationalThick-Film Intumescent

Isolatek InternationalCafco Fendolite MIICementitious

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsPittCharThick-Film Intumescent

Sherwin-WilliamsFiretex M90 & M93 Series Epoxy SystemsThick-Film Intumescent

U.S. Coatings, LLCAlbiCladThick-Film Intumescent

Fire-Resistive Coatings Fire Resistance from 1 to 2Hours (UL1709 Rating)Steel

Andek CorporationAndek FiregardThin-Film Intumescent

Carboline CompanyPyrocreteCementitious

Cote-L Industries Inc.CeasefireThin-Film Intumescent

HJ3 Composite TechnologiesHJ3 CarbonSeal Industrial SystemsCementitious

International Paint LLCInternationalThick-Film Intumescent

Isolatek InternationalCafco Fendolite MIICementitious

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsPittCharThick-Film Intumescent

Sherwin-WilliamsFiretex M90 & M93 Series Epoxy SystemsThin-Film Intumescent

U.S. Coatings, LLCAlbiCladThick-Film Intumescent

Heat-Resistant Coatings Dry Heat Resistance from 201 F to 450 F (99 C to 233 C)Steel

Carboline CompanyThermalineNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Coatings For Industry, Inc.SiloxsealSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Devoe HPC (International Paint LLC)Devoe High Performance CoatingsSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Diamond Vogel Paint CompanyCote-AllSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Flame Control Coatings, LLCFlame Control 500/555 TemperKote 600Epoxy Ester/Epoxy Ester

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop Maximum/SP-X Silicone Poly PlusSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Hempel (USA) Inc.15780/56900/56900IOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Unmodified

Highland International, Inc.47 Chem-Temp EpoxyNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Hi-Temp Coatings TechnologyHi-Temp 500VSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

International Paint LLCInternationalSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Jotun Paints Inc.Solvalitt Midtherm/Solvalitt Midtherm Silicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Peerless Industrial SystemsEpigenNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Riley Paint CompanyRiley PaintSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale Paint83206 Hi Heat EnamelSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Sherwin-WilliamsEpo-Phen/Epo-PhenNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-3310Novolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

U.S. Coatings, LLCHeatGripSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Walla Walla EnvironmentalFlame GuardSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Wilko Paint, Inc.WilkoIOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Modified

Heat-Resistant Coatings Dry Heat Resistance from 451 F to 800 F (234 C to 427 C)Steel

Carboline CompanyThermalineNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Devoe HPC (International Paint LLC)Devoe High Performance CoatingsSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Diamond Vogel Paint CompanyCote-AllSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Flame Control Coatings, LLCFlame Control 850/888 Temperkote 600Alkyd Modified/Alkyd Modified

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop Maximum/SP-X Silicone Poly PlusSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Hempel (USA) Inc.15780/56910/56910IOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Unmodified

Highland International, Inc.827-DF Dry-Fall 1200F Epoxy/805-DF 1200FCopolymerSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Hi-Temp Coatings TechnologyHi-Temp 1000VSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Jotun Paints Inc.Resist 86 AV/SolvalittIOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Modified

Peerless Industrial SystemsEpigenNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatIOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Modified

Riley Paint CompanyRiley PaintSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintClovathermSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

U.S. Coatings, LLCHeatGripSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Walla Walla EnvironmentalFlame GuardSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Wilko Paint, Inc.WilkoIOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Unmodified

HEMPELCoatingswww.hempel.uswww.hempel.com

SPONSORED BYSpecialty Functions 13

SPONSORED BYSpecialty Functions

Heat-Resistant Coatings Dry Heat Resistance from 801 F to 1200 F (428 C to 649 C)Steel

Carboline CompanyThermalineNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Diamond Vogel Paint CompanyCote-AllSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Flame Control Coatings, LLCTemperKote 1000Silicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Hempel (USA) Inc.56910/56910Silicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Highland International, Inc.899 Dry-Fall 1200F /899-DF 1200FSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Hi-Temp Coatings TechnologyHi-Temp 1027Silicone Modified/Silicone Modified

International Paint LLCinternationalSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Jotun Paints Inc.Jotatemp 650/Jotatemp 650 Silicone Modified/Silicone Modified

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Riley Paint CompanyRiley PaintSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintHiHeat Silicone AuminumSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

U.S. Coatings, LLCHeatGripSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

Wilko Paint, Inc.WilkoIOZinc Rich Primer/Silicone Unmodified

Heat-Resistant Coatings Under Insulation Wet Heat Resistance up to 300 F (149 C)Steel

Carboline CompanyThermalineEpoxy Phenolic/Epoxy Phenolic

Flame Control Coatings, LLCTemperKote CUI HSSilicone Unmodified/Silicone Unmodified

HEMPELCoatingswww.hempel.uswww.hempel.com

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop Maximum/SP-X Silicone Poly PlusSilicone Modified/Silicone Modified

Hempel (USA) Inc.85671/85671Epoxy Phenolic/Epoxy Phenolic

Highland International, Inc.74 Chem-Temp EpoxyNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Jotun Paints Inc.Jotatemp 650/Jotatemp 650 Silicone Modified/Silicone Modified

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatEpoxy Phenolic/Epoxy Phenolic

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintClovamastic micaceous iron oxide epoxyNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Sherwin-WilliamsEpo-Phen / Epo-PhenNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-3310Novolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

U.S. Coatings, LLCGripLineNovolac Epoxy/Novolac Epoxy

Wilko Paint, Inc.WilkoInorganic Zinc-Rich

Concrete Surfacing Materials

Amercoat Canada/Nukote CanadaPolySpecEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Andek CorporationPolagardAcrylic Blockfiller

Carboline CompanySemstoneEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Coatings For Industry, Inc.WearcoatEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Concrete Coatings Inc.Spray-Tek, Broom-Tek, Micro-TekCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Concrete Solutions Products by Rhino LiningsConcrete Solutions Quick Set Patch MixCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Duromar, Inc.HPL-1301 / GMC PuttyEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Euclid Chemical CompanyTammspatch IICementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Gemite Products Inc.Fibre-PatchCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Global EcoTechnologiesEndura-FlexEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Hi-Tech Concrete Coatings Inc.TennantEpoxy Sealer

Induron Coatings, Inc.EFS-707Epoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Industrial Coatings & SealantsMiracote, Life PaintCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

International CoatingsICO GelEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Jotun Paints Inc.Pen-O-PrepEpoxy Sealer

Kryton International Inc.Hydrostop Grout, Hydrostop CoatingCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Micor Company, Inc.Floorlife DFEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Peerless Industrial SystemsepigenEpoxy Sealer

Plexi-Chemie, Inc.PlexiCladEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

Polymax/Milamar Coatings LLCPolyMax PM100 SeriesEpoxy Surfacer (2-Part)

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatEpoxy Ester Blockfiller

Protective Floor and Linings Div. Milamar Ctgs. PF&L EpofilEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Rhino Linings CorporationConcrete Solutions Quick Set Patch MixCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Rock-Tred CorporationChem-Wall Block FillerEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Sherwin-WilliamsKem Cati HSEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-263 Rapid-Hardening MortarCementitious Modified Block Filler

Specialty Products, Inc. (SPI)Synergy Series Aquaseal-UBOther Special Block Filler

SpeedCove Inc. DBA Solid Rock EnterprisesSpeedCove Precast Cove Base SystemsOther Special Block Filler

Stirling Lloyd Group Plc.SafetrackOther Special Block Filler

SpeedCove3 wrule:Layout 1 10/9/09 3:21 P

14

SPONSORED BYSpecialty Functions

Stirling Lloyd Products Inc.MetasetAcrylic Blockfiller

Tnemec Company, Inc.MortarCladCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

U.S. Coatings, LLCAquaGripEpoxy Sealer

WestcoatWestcoatCementitious Modified Surfacer/Patcher

Wilko Paint, Inc.WilkoEpoxy Blockfiller (2-Part)

Antifoulant and Foulant Release CoatingsSteel

Carboline CompanyC-FlexFouling Release

Duromar, Inc.HPL-2510 FRFouling Release

Hempel (USA) Inc.17630-3/17630-3/27302/87500Fouling Release

International Paint LLCInternationalFouling Release

Jotun Paints Inc.SeaLionFouling Release

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsSigmaFouling Release

Seacoat TechnologySea-SpeedFouling Release

Sherwin-WilliamsSeaguard 5000HS / Coppeer Bottom AF 45Coventional (Copper Biocide)

Specialty Products, Inc. (SPI)Polyshield HT-100F UB, Polyshield HTFouling Release

HEMPELCoatingswww.hempel.uswww.hempel.com

Antifoulant and Foulant Release CoatingsConcrete

Duromar, Inc.HPL-1301 / HPL-2510 FRFouling Release

International Paint LLCInternationalFouling Release

Jotun Paints Inc.SeaLionFouling Release

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsSigmaFouling Release

Seacoat TechnologySea-SpeedFouling Release

Specialty Products, Inc. (SPI)Aquaseal Hi-Rise X3, Polyshield HT-100F UBFouling Release

Shop Primers for Steel

ABRI IndustriesIronBond 111Inorganic Zinc

Carboline CompanyCarbozincInorganic Zinc

Devoe HPC (International Paint LLC)Devoe High Performance CoatingsAlkyd (Universal Primer)

Diamond Vogel Paint CompanyIron Prime 250Alkyd (Fast Dry)

FSC Coatings Inc.Rustop MaximumEpoxy (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Hempel (USA) Inc.15890Inorganic Zinc

Highland International, Inc.84 Fast Dry Phenolic Modified Alkyd PrimerAlkyd (Fast Dry)

Induron Coatings, Inc.Indurazinc MC67Organic Zinc (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Jotun Paints Inc.Muki Z WB 14Inorganic Zinc

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsAmercoatAlkyd (Universal Primer)

Rhino Linings CorporationRhino Linings Epoxy PrimerEpoxy (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Riley Paint CompanyRiley PaintAlkyd (Fast Dry)

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale PaintBarrier III HSAlkyd (Universal Primer)

Sherwin-WilliamsRecoatable Epoxy PrimerEpoxy (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Simpson Strong-TieSS-T FX-408 Zinc-Rich Epoxy PrimerInorganic Zinc

Specialty Products, Inc. (SPI)ClovaBondEpoxy (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Tesla NanoCoatings, Inc.TeslanOrganic Zinc (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Tnemec Company, Inc.Tnemec PrimerAlkyd (Universal Primer)

U.S. Coatings, LLCZincGardInorganic Zinc

Wasser CorporationWasserOrganic Zinc (Fast Dry, Extended Recoat)

Wilko Paint, Inc.WlkoAlkyd (Universal Primer)

Williams-Hayward Protective CoatingsHi-KoteAlkyd (Fast Dry)

Conversion Coatings

ABRI IndustriesIronBond 111Corrosion Protection

Bowers IndustrialDuromarCorrosion Protection

ConShield TechnologiesConShieldCorrosion Protection

Corrocoat USA Inc.CorrocoatCorrosion Protection

CorrosealCorroseal Rust Converting PrimerCorrosion Protection

hci chemtech, inc.Enviro-Prep System for Lead AbatementOther

Polyguard Products, Inc.ReactiveGelCorrosion Protection

Riley Paint CompanyRiley PaintCorrosion Protection

Rust Bullet, LLCRust Bullet StandardCorrosion Protection

Sub-One TechnologyInnerArmorSurface Hardening

Watson Coatings, Inc.Armor-ShieldOther

15

Advanced Science CoatingsPO Box 748Sunset Beach, CA 90742 Phone: 209-481-2042Contact: Tom [email protected]

AFM3251 Third Ave.San Diego, CA 92103 Phone: 619-239-0321Contact: Jay [email protected]

Albi Mfg. A Division of StanChem Inc.401 Berlin St.East Berlin, CT 06023 Phone: 860-828-0571Contact:W. Casey [email protected]

Aldo Products Company, Inc.1604 N. Main St.Kannapolis, NC 28081 Phone: 800-474-6019Contact: Robert [email protected]

Alistagen CorporationTen Park Ave.New York, NY 10016 Phone: 212-317-0100Contact: Alis [email protected]

Alwan Paints and CoatingsAmeer Khusro Rd., KarsazKarachi, 75350 PakistanPhone: 92-321-8950091Contact: Raza [email protected]

Amercoat Canada/Nukote Canada1174 South Service Rd. W.Oakville, ON L6L 5T7 CanadaPhone: 905-847-1500Contact: Daniel [email protected]

American Industrial1218 W. 41st St., Ste. BTulsa, OK 74107 Phone: 918-445-0627Contact: Fred [email protected]

AmTech Tank Lining & Tank Repair75-4 Main St., Ste. 300Plymouth, NH 03264 Phone: 888-839-0373Contact: Dennis [email protected]

Andek Corporation850 Glen Ave., PO Box 392Moorestown, NJ 08057Phone: 800-800-2844Contact: Neil [email protected]

ARC CompositesDiv. of A.W. Chesterton860 Salem St., Bldg. AGroveland, MA 01834 Phone: 978-469-6666Contact: Kathy [email protected]

Aremco ProductsPO Box 517Valley Cottage, NY 10989 Phone: 845-268-0039Contact: Peter [email protected]

Arizona Polymer Flooring Inc.7731 N. 68th Ave.Glendale, AZ 85303 Phone: 888-855-3455Contact: Daniel [email protected] our display ad, p. 71.

Arkema Inc.900 First Ave., Bldg. #10King of Prussia, PA 19406 Phone: 610-205-7898Contact: Vince [email protected]

Arma Coatings5555 W. 11th Ave.Eugene, OR 97402 Phone: 800-524-2762Contact: Charles [email protected]

Armor Shield1343 Union Ave., NEGrand Rapids, MI 49505 Phone: 616-245-0757Contact: Patrick [email protected]

Associated Paint10160 NW South River Dr.Miami, FL 33178 Phone: 305-885-1964Contact: Lee [email protected]

ASTC Polymers Inc.3207 West Warner Ave.Santa Ana, CA 92704 Phone: 714-966-2893Contact: Dick [email protected]

Atlas Minerals & Chemicals, Inc.1227 Valley Rd., PO Box 38Mertztown, PA 19539 Phone: 610-682-7171Contact: Scott [email protected]

Avid Protective Products Ltd.2085 Laurelwood Dr.Oakville, ON L6H 4S8 CanadaPhone: 905-339-8386Contact: David [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles

Aashish Coating Tech Pvt. Ltd.140 Laxmi PlazaNew Link Rd., Andheri W.Mumbai, 400053 IndiaPhone: 91 22 [email protected]

ABRI Industries8055 West Manchester Ave.Ste. 735Playa Del Rey, CA 90293 Phone: 310-341-3600Contact: Lee [email protected]

AcryliCon Flooring Solutions12460 Crabapple Rd., Ste. 202-106Alpharetta, GA 30004 Phone: 888-736-7550Contact: Jason [email protected]

Acrylux Paint Co.6010 Powerline Rd.Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33309 Phone: 954-772-0300Contact: Andrew [email protected]

Acrymax Technologies, Inc.221 Brooke St.Media, PA 19063 Phone: 800-553-0523Contact: Eric [email protected]

Acry-Tech Coatings Inc.3601 NE 5th Ave.Ft. Lauderdale, FL 33334 Phone: 954-565-6001Contact:Miki [email protected]

Advanced Chemical Technologies, Inc.9608 North Robinson Ave.Oklahoma City, OK 73114 Phone: 800-535-0433Contact: Kevin [email protected]

iStockphoto.com/mikeuk

Ceram-Kote Coatings Inc.1800 Industrial Dr.Big Spring, TX 79720 Phone: 432-263-8497Contact: Kevin [email protected]

ChemCo Systems2800 Bay Rd.Redwood City, CA 94063 Phone: 800-757-6773Contact: John [email protected]

Chemcoat, Inc.2790 Canfields Ln.Montoursville, PA 17754 Phone: 800-326-9471Contact: Art [email protected]

Chemical Products Industries7649 SW 34th St.Oklahoma City, OK 73179 Phone: 405-745-2070Contact: Jordan [email protected]

Chemline5151 Natural Bridge Rd.St. Louis, MO 63115 Phone: 314-664-2230Contact: Steve [email protected]

ChemMasters, Inc.300 Edwards St.Madison, OH 44057 Phone: 440-428-2105Contact: John [email protected]

CIM Industries23 Elm St.Peterborough, NH 03458 Phone: 603-924-9481Contact: Becky [email protected]

Cloverdale Paint Inc.6950 King George Blvd.Surrey, BC V3W 4Z1 CanadaPhone: 604-596-6261Contact: Trevor [email protected]

CMP/Chugoku1610 Engineers Rd.Belle Chasse, LA 70037 Phone: 504-392-4817Contact: Nancy [email protected]

Coating Systems & Supply, LLC11479 Darryl Dr.Baton Rouge, LA 70815 Phone: 225-272-6385Contact:Michael R. [email protected]

Coatings For Industry, Inc.319 Township Line Rd.Souderton, PA 18964 Phone: 877-723-0919Contact: Kevin Klotzcficoatings.com

Comex Group5575 DTC Pkwy.Greenwood Village, CO 80111 Phone: 720-873-3060Contact: Customer [email protected]

Composite Technologies2010 Scott Ave.Calberton, NY 11933 Phone: 631-680-0662Contact: Gerald [email protected]

Concrete Coatings Inc.1105 N. 1600 W.Layton, UT 84041 Phone: 801-544-8771Contact: Cory [email protected]

Concrete SolutionsProducts by Rhino Linings9151 Rehco Rd.San Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 800-422-2603Contact: Bart [email protected]

Conklin Company Inc.551 Valley Park Dr.Shakopee, MN 55379 Phone: 800-888-8838Contact: Building Products Groupconklin.com

ConShield Technologies541 10th St., #233Atlanta, GA 30318 Phone: 877-543-2094Contact: Joe [email protected]

Construction Specialties Group, Inc.15783 Crocus LaneDumfries, VA 22025 Phone: 703-670-5300Contact: Neil [email protected]

Construction Systems SupplyPO Box 3894Seattle, WA 98124 Phone: 888-858-3790Contact: Ron [email protected]

Avilion Inc.3947 Lincoln Hwy.Downingtown, PA 19335 Phone: 610-942-7388Contact:Michelle [email protected]

Axalta Coating Systems North America9800 Genard Rd.Houston, TX 77041 Phone: 800-247-3886Contact: Customer [email protected]

BASF Corporation–Construction Systems889 Valley Park Dr.Shakopee, MN 55379 Phone: 800-433-9517Contact: Customer [email protected]

Bechtel Industrial Coating Supply21424 SE 16th Pl.Sammamish, WA 98075 Phone: 425-392-1876Contact: Robert [email protected]

Blendex Industrial Corp.135 Bangor St.Lindenhurst, NY 11757 Phone: 888-376-9935Contact: John [email protected]

Blome InternationalPart of the HEMPEL Group1450 Hoff Industrial Dr.O'Fallon, MO 63366 Phone: 636-379-9119Contact:Marcella [email protected]

Blue River Coatings2910 South Nebraska Ave.Hastings, NE 68901 Phone: 888-420-2628Contact: Phil [email protected]

Blue Water Marine Paint1999 Elizabeth St.North Brunswick, NJ 08902 Phone: 908-967-9867Contact: Paul [email protected]

Bowers Industrial3645 W. 1987 SouthSalt Lake City, UT 84104 Phone: 800-892-5224Contact: Kevin [email protected]

Bradley Coatings Group2873 West Hardies Rd.Gibsonia, PA 15044 Phone: 724-444-4400Contact: Phil [email protected]

Burke Industrial Coatings600 South 74 Pl., #108Ridgefield, WA 98642 Phone: 800-348-3245Contact: Jim Harrisjpharris@burkeindustrialcoatings.comburkeindustrialcoatings.com

Cantex Coatings Ltd.2390 Industrial St.Burlington, ON M7P 1A5 CanadaPhone: 905-319-8972Contact: Jerry Van [email protected]

CANUSA-CPS25 Bethridge Rd.Toronto, ON M9W 1M7 CanadaPhone: 416-744-5798Contact: Bob [email protected]

Capitol Paint Manufacturing Corp.722 SW 23rd St.Oklahoma City, OK 73109 Phone: 405-634-3383Contact: Stan [email protected]

Carboline Company2150 Schuetz Rd.St. Louis, MO 63146 Phone: 314-644-1000Contact: Customer [email protected] our display ad, inside front cover.

CCI Con-Tech of California, Inc.2211 Navy Dr.Stockton, CA 95206 Phone: 209-941-8324Contact: Steven A. [email protected]

Ceilcote (International Paint LLC)6001 Antoine Dr.Houston, TX 77091 Phone: 800-589-1267Contact: Sales [email protected]

Celufibre Industries Inc.14735 - 124th Ave.Edmonton, AB T5L 3B2 CanadaPhone: 780-447-1255Contact: Kevin [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles17

Contego International, Inc.334 Greyhound Pass WestCarmel, IN 46032 Phone: 800-434-6444Contact: Tony [email protected]

Contract Coatings Corporation706 E. Main St.Stockton, CA 95202 Phone: 209-465-2634Contact: Arlen [email protected]

Convenience Products/Seal-Krete306 Gandy Rd.Auburndale, FL 33823 Phone: 800-323-7357Contact: David [email protected] our display ad, p. 70.

Cooley Group50 Esten Ave.Pawtucket, RI 02860 Phone: 401-721-6261Contact: David [email protected]

Copolymer Protection SystemsPO Box 2860Danville, CA 94526 Phone: 925-551-7796Contact: Gerald [email protected]

Copps Industries, Inc.10600 N. Industrial Dr.Mequon, WI 53092 Phone: 800-672-2622Contact: Jeff [email protected]

Corolon Coatings & Corrosion Control Tech. Inc.2 Haas Rd.Toronto, ON M9W 3A2 CanadaPhone: 416-401-8855Contact: Stan E. [email protected]

Corotech High Performance Coatings101 Paragon Dr.Montvale, NJ 07645 Phone: 201-949-6216Contact: Jeffrey T [email protected]

Corporacion Mara SAJr. Pereseo 251Chorrillos, 9 PeruPhone: 51-12013535Contact: Fredy [email protected]

Corrocoat LimitedForster St., LeedsWest Yorkshire, LS10 1PW UKPhone: 44 113 276 0760Contact: Graham Greenwoodcorrocoat.com

Corrocoat USA Inc.6525 Greenland Rd.Jacksonville, FL 32258 Phone: 904-268-4559Contact: Josh [email protected]

Corroseal6107 N. Marine Dr.Portland, OR 97203 Phone: 800-237-1573Contact: Sue [email protected]

Cortec Corporation4119 White Bear Pkwy.St. Paul, MN 55110 Phone: 651-429-1100Contact: Cliff [email protected]

Cote-L Industries Inc.1542 Jefferson St.Teaneck, NJ 07666 Phone: 201-836-0733Contact: Cy [email protected]

CRC-Evans7011 High Life Dr.Houston, TX 77066 Phone: 832-249-3100Contact: Kevin [email protected]

Creto Worldwide125 East Reno Ave., Ste. 1Las Vegas, NV 89119 Phone: 702-372-6274Contact: John [email protected]

Crossfield Products Corp.3000 E. Harcourt St.Rancho Dominguez, CA 90221 Phone: 310-886-9100Contact: Jodi [email protected]

CSL Silicones Inc.144 Woodlawn Rd. WestGuelph, ON N1H 1B5 CanadaPhone: 519-836-9044Contact: Patrick [email protected]

Dow Chemical Company9008 BuildingMidland, MI 48642 Phone: 800-447-4369Contact: Dave Petersondow.com

Dow Corning CorporationPO Box 0994Midland, MI 48686Phone: 800-248-2481Contact: Customer [email protected]/coatings

Dudick, Inc.1818 Miller Pkwy.Streetsboro, OH 44241 Phone: 330-562-1970Contact: Barb [email protected]

Dunn-Edwards4885 E. 52nd Pl.Los Angeles, CA 90058 Phone: 888-337-2468Contact: Customer [email protected]

Duraamen Engineered Products Inc.116 West 23rd St.New York, NY 10011 Phone: 212-386-7609Contact: Victor [email protected]

Duromar, Inc.706 Washington St.Pembroke, MA 02359 Phone: 781-826-2525Contact: Paul [email protected]

Dynafloor Systems553 Highland Rd. E.Macedonia, OH 44056 Phone: 800-453-6366Contact: Jerry [email protected]

Dynamic Coatings Inc.5629 East Westover Ave.Fresno, CA 93727 Phone: 877-225-2549Contact: Peter [email protected]

Dampney Co., Inc.85 Paris St.Everett, MA 02149 Phone: 617-389-2805Contact: Dennis [email protected]

Daubert Chemical Co.4700 S. Central Ave.Chicago, IL 60638 Phone: 708-563-8302Contact: Frank [email protected]

Daubert Cromwell12701 S. Ridgeway Ave.Alsip, IL 60803 Phone: 708-293-7750Contact:Martin [email protected]

Davlin Coatings700 Alston WayBerkeley, CA 94710 Phone: 510-848-2863Contact: Jim [email protected]

Demilec (USA) LLC2925 Galleria Dr.Arlington, TX 76011 Phone: 817-640-4900Contact: Robert [email protected]

Denso North America9747 Whithorn Dr.Houston, TX 77095 Phone: 281-821-3355Contact: Jesse [email protected] our display ad, p. 115.

Dependable, LLCPO Box 16307Rocky River, OH 44116 Phone: 717-951-0494Contact: Joe [email protected]

Devoe High Performance Coatings (International Paint LLC)6001 Antoine Dr.Houston, TX 77091 Phone: 800-589-1267Contact: Sales/Tech. [email protected]

Diamond Vogel Paint Company1110 Albany Pl. SEOrange City, IA 51041 Phone: 712-737-8880Contact: Perry [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles18

Elastomer Specialties Inc.10848 South 265thBroken Arrow, OK 74014 Phone: 918-486-4244Contact: Neil [email protected]

Endura Manufacturing Ltd.12425-149th St.Edmonton, AB T5L 2J6 CanadaPhone: 780-451-4242Contact: Elissa [email protected]

Endur-O-Seal USA, Inc.12502 Lazywood Ln.Pinehurst, TX 77362 Phone: 281-356-5117Contact: Tessi [email protected]

ENECON Corporation6 Platinum Crt.Medford, NY 11763 Phone: 516-349-0022Contact:Mike [email protected]

Enviroline (International Paint LLC)6001 Antoine Dr.Houston, TX 77091 Phone: 800-589-1267Contact: Sales [email protected]

Environmental Protective Coatings Inc.2035 Regency Rd., Ste. 5Lexington, KY 40503 Contact: Homer O. [email protected]

Envirotrol, Inc.2594 Flat Shoals Rd.Conyers, GA 30013 Phone: 770-922-4737Contact: Pat [email protected]

Eoncoat LLC4000 Airport Dr. NWWilson, NC 27896 Phone: 252-360-3110Contact: Jim [email protected]

EPDM Coatings494 Bridgeport Ave., Ste. 101-342Shelton, CT 06484 Phone: 855-281-0940Contact: Kelly [email protected]

Euclid Chemical Company19218 Redwood Rd.Cleveland, OH 44110 Phone: 800-321-7628Contact: Technical [email protected]

Evonik Industries299 Jefferson Rd.Parsippany, NJ 07054Phone: 973-929-8513Contact: Anil [email protected]

Fabick Protective Coatings4118 Robertson Rd.Madison, WI 53714 Phone: 608-242-1100Contact: Steven [email protected]

Farrell-Calhoun Paint221 East CarolinaMemphis, TN 38126 Phone: 901-526-2211Contact: Craig [email protected]

Farwest Corrosion Control Company1480 W. Artesia Blvd.Gardena, CA 90248Phone: 310-532-9314Contact:Marnie [email protected]

Fire Free Coatings Inc.580 Irwin St., Ste. 1San Rafael, CA 94901 Phone: 415-459-6488Contact: Elisa [email protected]

Flame Control Coatings, LLC4120 Hyde Park Blvd.Niagara Falls, NY 14305 Phone: 716-282-1399Contact: Tim [email protected]

Floor Seal Technology, Inc.1005 Ames Ave.Milpitas, CA 95035 Phone: 408-590-4849Contact: Bill [email protected]

FLOROCK, Crawford Labs, Inc.4165 S. Emerald Ave.Chicago, IL 60609 Phone: 800-356-7625Contact: Customer [email protected]

FSC Coatings Inc.5360 Eastgate Mall Rd., Ste FSan Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 800-579-8459Contact: Steve [email protected]

G3 Tapes11639 Riverside Dr., Ste. 103Lakeside, CA 92040 Phone: 619-448-4439Contact:Meghan [email protected]

Gaco Western, LLC200 West Mercer St., Ste. 202Seattle, WA 98119 Phone: 800-456-4226Contact: Customer [email protected]

Gelest, Inc.11 E. Steel Rd.Morrisville, PA 19067 Phone: 215-547-1015Contact: Gabrielle [email protected]

Gemite Products Inc.1787 Drew Rd.Mississauga, ON L5S 1J5 CanadaPhone: 888-443-6483Contact: Igor [email protected]

Georg Fischer Central Plastics39605 IndependenceShawnee, OK 74804 Phone: 800-654-3872Contact:Mark [email protected]

Gill Industries, Inc.3462 Kershaw Camden Hwy.Lancaster, SC 29720 Phone: 803-285-4831Contact: G. Shane [email protected]

Glidden Professional15885 W. Sprague Rd.Strongsville, OH 44136 Phone: 800-984-5444Contact: [email protected]

Global EcoTechnologiesPO Box 2205Antioch, CA 94531 Phone: 925-473-9250Contact: Scott [email protected]

Global Industrial Coatings11130 Twitty Dr.Rolla, MO 65401 Phone: 573-364-2722Contact: George [email protected]

Goodwest Linings and Coatings8814 Industrial Ln.Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730 Phone: 951-236-7576Contact: Patrick [email protected]

Groco Specialty Coatings10818 C.F. Hawn Fwy.Dallas, TX 75217 Phone: 972-286-7890Contact: Bob [email protected]

Gulf Coast Paint Mfg., Inc.30075 County Rd. 49Loxley, AL 36551 Phone: 251-964-7911Contact: John R. [email protected]

hci chemtech, inc.310 S. Bellis St.Wausau, WI 54403 Phone: 800-596-6282Contact: Cheryl [email protected]

HDIM Protective Coatings14538 121A Ave.Edmonton, AB T5L 4L2 CanadaPhone: 780-482-4346Contact: Norm [email protected]

Hempel (USA) Inc.600 Conroe Park North Dr.Conroe, TX 77303 Phone: 936-523-6000Contact:Marcella [email protected] our display ads, pp. 54, 82, and 100.

Heresite Protective Coatings, LLC822 South 14th St.Manitowoc, WI 54220 Phone: 920-684-6646Contact: Greg [email protected]

Highland International, Inc.465 Industrial Park Dr., PO Box 3564Boone, NC 28607 Phone: 828-265-2513Contact: Katie Dudakduda@highland-international.comhighland-international.comSee our display ad, p. 61.

Hi-Tech Concrete Coatings Inc.430 Oak Ln.Lititz, PA 17543 Phone: 717-664-4006Contact: Brian A. [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles19

Coating Company Profiles20

Industrial Maintenance Group, Inc.1904 Industrial Park Dr.Plant City, FL 33566 Phone: 813-659-3512Contact: Pete Van Fossenpete@industrialmaintenancegroup.comindustrialmaintenancegroup.com

Industrial Nanotech Inc.1925 Trade Center Way, Ste. 1Naples, FL 34109 Phone: 800-767-3998Contact: Francesca [email protected]

Inliner Technologies1468 West Hospital Rd.Paoli, IN 47454 Phone: 812-723-0704Contact: Geoff [email protected]

Innovative Coatings1685 Rossi Dr.Windsor, ON N9A 6J3 CanadaPhone: 519-737-9046Contact:Wayne [email protected]

Insulating Coatings Corporation27 Link Dr., Ste. DBinghamton, NY 13904 Phone: 800-223-8494Contact: Rick [email protected]

Integrated Protective Coatings Inc.7036 - 50th St.Edmonton, AB T6B 2J8 CanadaPhone: 780-456-3467Contact: Andrew [email protected]

Intercoastal Paint Co.14029 W. Hardy Rd.Houston, TX 77060 Phone: 281-448-5258Contact: Heidi [email protected]

International Cellulose Corporation12315 Robin Blvd.Houston, TX 77045 Phone: 800-444-1252Contact: Chuck [email protected]

International Chem-Crete Corp.800 Security RowRichardson, TX 75081 Phone: 972-671-6477Contact: Jay [email protected]

International Coatings311 NW 122nd St., Ste. 100Oklahoma City, OK 73114 Phone: 800-624-8919Contact: Eileen [email protected]

International Metal Fusion Corporation900 NW 10th Ave.Fort Lauderdale, FL 33311 Phone: 409-515-0532Contact: Abad [email protected]

International Paint LLC6001 Antoine Dr.Houston, TX 77091 Phone: 800-589-1267Contact: Sales [email protected] our display ad, p. 63.

International Polyurethane Systems5590 46th Ave. SESalmon Arm, BC V1E 4S1 CanadaPhone: 250-832-5142Contact: Don [email protected]

IPA Systems, Inc.2745 N. Amber St.Philadelphia, PA 19134 Phone: 215-425-6607Contact: John [email protected]

IPS Polymers Systems8530 Milliken Ave.Rancho Cucamonga, CA 91730 Phone: 909-941-4999Contact: Amy [email protected]

Isolatek International41 Furnace St.Stanhope, NJ 07874 Phone: 800-631-9600Contact: Sean [email protected]

ITW Devcon30 Endicott St.Danvers, MA 01923 Phone: 800-933-8266Contact: Jessica [email protected]

ITW Polymers Coatings North America12055 Cutten Rd.Houston, TX 77066 Phone: 267-646-1437Contact: Alan [email protected] our display ad, p.120 .

Hi-Temp Coatings TechnologyPO Box 2347Acton, MA 01720 Phone: 978-635-1110Contact:Mike [email protected]

HJ3 Composite Technologies2440 West Majestic Park WayTucson, AZ 85705 Phone: 520-322-0010Contact: John [email protected]

Huntsman Polyurethanes2190 Executive Hills Blvd.Auburn Hills, MI 48326 Phone: 248-322-7431Contact: Kevin A. [email protected]/pu/ace

Hydra Tech Engineered Products10448 Chester Rd.Cincinnati, OH 45215 Phone: 513-827-9169Contact: Tim [email protected]

Hydrex Underwater Technology604 Druid Rd. E.Clearwater, FL 33756 Phone: 727-443-3900Contact: John [email protected]

Hyperseal34-801 Spyder Cir.Palm Desert, CA 92211 Phone: 760-324-7900Contact: Brian [email protected]

IndMar Coatings Corporation317 W. Main St., PO Box 456Wakefield, VA 23888 Phone: 757-899-3807Contact:Wilmer [email protected]

Induron Coatings, Inc.3333 R. Arrington Jr. Blvd. N.Birmingham, AL 35234 Phone: 800-324-9584Contact: Jeff [email protected]

Industrial Coatings & Sealants12521 Evergreen Dr., Ste. BMukilteo, WA 98275 Phone: 425-742-5693Contact: Greg [email protected]

Jamestown Coating Technologies108 Main St.Jamestown, PA 16134 Phone: 724-932-3101Contact:Michael [email protected]

Johnson Industrial Coatings10436 N. NC Hwy. 150Clemmons, NC 27012 Phone: 336-764-1648Contact: Jay [email protected]

Jotun Paints Inc.842 W. Sam Houston Pkwy. N. City Center Three, Ste. 300Houston, TX 77024 Phone: 314-616-1797Contact: [email protected] our display ads, pp. 74 and 106.

Kaufman Products, Inc.3811 Curtis Ave.Baltimore, MD 21226 Phone: 800-637-6372Contact: Alex [email protected]

KCC Corrosion Control Co., Ltd.4018 Trey Dr.Houston, TX 77084 Phone: 281-550-1199Contact: Owen T. [email protected]

Kelly-Moore Paint Company987 Commercial St.San Carlos, CA 94070 Phone: 800-874-4436Contact: Rusty [email protected]

KEMA Coatings LImited60 Wyndham St. South, Unit 904Guelph, ON N1E 7H7 CanadaPhone: 519-826-9374Contact:Mark [email protected]

Kemper System America, Inc.1 Reuten Dr.Closter, NJ 07624 Phone: 800-541-5455Contact: James [email protected]

Key Resin Company4050 Clough Woods Dr.Batavia, OH 45103 Phone: 888-943-4532Contact: Eric [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles21

Pacific Southwest Coatings18220 Watson WayYorba Linda, CA 92886 Phone: 714-225-3688Contact: Laurence [email protected]

Paragon Fusionclad809 77 Ave.Edmonton, AB T6P 1S9 CanadaPhone: 780-461-7719Contact: Dean [email protected]

Pecora165 Wambold Rd.Harleysville, PA 19438 Phone: 215-799-7530Contact: Alicia [email protected]

Peerless Industrial SystemsPO Box 2041Hampton East, 03189 AustraliaPhone: 61 408 949 368Contact: Nick [email protected]

peerlessindustrialsystems.com

Pilgrim Permocoat402 South 22nd St.Tampa, FL 33605 Phone: 800-637-3328Contact: Robert [email protected]

Plastocor Inc.100 Research Rd.Hingham, MA 02043 Phone: 724-942-0582Contact: Jim [email protected]

The Platt Brothers & CompanyPO Box 1030Waterbury, CT 06721 Phone: 203-753-4194Contact: David [email protected]

Plexi-Chemie, Inc.606 Lane Ave. North, Ste. 6Jacksonville, FL 32043 Phone: 904-693-8800Contact: Elizabeth [email protected]

Polar IndustriesPO Box 293Fisher Branch, MB R0C 0Z0 CanadaPhone: 786-955-4008Contact: Lillian [email protected]

Neogard2728 Empire CentralDallas, TX 75235 Phone: 214-353-1689Contact: Bob [email protected]

NIC Industries7050 6th St.White City, OR 97503 Phone: 541-826-1922Contact: Jeff [email protected]

Normac Adhesive Products Inc.1350 Heine Crt.Burlington, ON L7L 6M4 CanadaPhone: 905-332-6455Contact: George [email protected]

Northern Industries Inc.429 Tiogue Ave.Coventry, RI 02816 Phone: 401-821-2121Contact: Rick [email protected]

NOV Tuboscope2835 Holmes Rd.Houston, TX 77051 Phone: 713-799-5130Contact: Ryan [email protected]

Nox-Crete Products Group1444 S. 20th St.Omaha, NE 68108 Phone: 402-341-2080Contact: Customer [email protected]

NSP Specialty ProductsPO Box 4690Pinehurst, NC 28374 Phone: 910-235-0468Contact: Larry [email protected]

Oak Ridge Chemical and Equipment575 Commercial Ave.Green Lake, WI 54941 Phone: 800-625-9577Contact: Jed [email protected]

OCM–Adeka1215 Henri Dr.Wauconda, IL 60084 Phone: 866-457-5710Contact:Mike [email protected]

Klaas Coatings (North America) LLCPO Box 25122Dallas, TX 75225 Phone: 866-317-3633Contact: Richard Taylorinfo@klaascoatings-northamerica.comklaascoatings-northamerica.com

KOSTER American Corp.2585 Aviator Dr.Virginia Beach, VA 23453 Phone: 757-425-1206Contact: Ray [email protected]

Kryton International Inc.1645 East Kent Ave.Vancouver, BC V5P 2S8 CanadaPhone: 604-324-8280Contact: Isabella [email protected]

Linabond1161 Avenida AcosoCamarillo, CA 93012 Phone: 818-362-7373Contact: Georgia [email protected]

Liquid Metal Coatings, LLC7015 W. 16th Ave.Lakewood, CO 80215 Phone: 303-202-204Contact: Bob Scheckliquidmetalcoatings.com

Lone Star Specialties, LLC6412 US Hwy. 259 SouthLone Star, TX 75668 Phone: 903-656-2536Contact: Tony Thigpenlonestarspecialties.net

Lonza Microbial Control5660 New Northside Dr., Ste. 1100Atlanta, GA 30328 Phone: 800-523-7391Contact: Damali [email protected]

LuminOre6060 Corte del CedroCarlsbad, CA 93011 Phone: 760-431-7705Contact: Jenny [email protected]

MMad Dog Primer309 Plum St. N.Northfield, MN 55057 Phone: 507-645-7431Contact: Steve [email protected]

Madison Chemical Industries490 McGeachie Dr.Milton, ON L9T 3Y5 CanadaPhone: 905-878-8863Contact: Kim [email protected]

Mascoat4310 Campbell Rd.Houston, TX 77041 Phone: 713-465-0304Contact: Chad [email protected] our display ad, p. 56.

Micor Company, Inc.3232 N. 31st St.Milwaukee, WI 53216 Phone: 800-284-4308Contact: Bill [email protected]

Midsun Group, Inc.135 Redstone St.Southington, CT 06480 Phone: 860-378-0100Contact: Andy [email protected]

Morin Industrial Coatings Ltd.Box 765Lively, ON P3Y 1M7 CanadaPhone: 705-692-9090Contact: Adam [email protected]

Nanochem Technologies1203 Kent St.Elkhart, IN 46514 Phone: 574-970-2436Contact: Richard J. [email protected]

National Polymers Inc.9 Guttman Ave.Charleroi, PA 15022 Phone: 724-483-9300Contact: Erica [email protected]

Nationwide ChemicalCoating Mfrs., Inc.7106 24th Crt. EastSarasota, FL 34243 Phone: 800-423-7264Contact: [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles22

Polibrid Coatings, Inc.6700 F.M. 802Brownsville, TX 78526 Phone: 956-831-7818Contact: Klaus D. [email protected]

Polycoat Products14722 Spring Ave.Santa Fe Springs, CA 90670 Phone: 562-802-8834Contact: Joe [email protected]

Polycorp Ltd.33 York St.Elora, ON N0B 1S0 CanadaPhone: 519-846-2075Contact: Dennis [email protected]

Polyguard Products, Inc.PO Box 755Ennis, TX 75120 Phone: 281-580-5700Contact: Chic [email protected]

Polymax/Milamar Coatings LLC311 NW 122nd St., Ste. 100Oklahoma City, OK 73114 Phone: 405-755-8454Contact: Joanne [email protected]

Polytech Industrial Coatings, Inc.PO Box 12407Fresno, CA 93777 Phone: 800-507-2953Contact: Andrew [email protected]

polytechindustrialcoatings.com

Polyval Coatings520 Boul Cure BoivinBoisbriand, QC H3S 2N6 CanadaPhone: 800-465-0905Contact:Marc [email protected]

PPC Coatings (MTR)2 Pixie Rd.Wilmington, DE 19810 Phone: 877-588-2227Contact: Cliff [email protected]

PPG Protective & Marine CoatingsOne PPG Pl.Pittsburgh, PA 15272 Phone: 888-977-4762Contact: Steve [email protected] our display ad, p. 116.

Precision Coatings Inc.1940 East TrafficwaySpringfield, MO 65802 Phone: 888-340-6780Contact: Jim O’[email protected]

Preferred Products Corp.231 S. 3rd St.Burlington, IA 52601 Phone: 319-754-4823Contact: Ken [email protected]

Premier Coating Systems Inc.606 N. Lane Ave., #6Jacksonville, FL 32254 Phone: 904-824-1799Contact: Ron [email protected]

Prime Coat Coating Systems405 Oakwood Ave.Waukegan, IL 60085 Phone: 847-362-5111Contact: Kevin [email protected]

Professional Products of Kansas, Inc.4456 S. CliftonWichita, KS 67216 Phone: 316-522-9300Contact: Vicky [email protected]

Protective Floorings and Linings a Div. of Milamar Coatings LLC311 NW 122nd St., Ste. 100Oklahoma City, OK 73114 Phone: 405-755-8454Contact: Joanne [email protected]

Protecto Wrap Company1955 Cherokee St.Denver, CO 80223 Phone: 800-759-9727Contact: Victoria [email protected]

Protek Paint Ltd.335 Horner Ave.Toronto, ON M8W 1Z6 CanadaPhone: 800-773-5233Contact: Barry [email protected]

Pyrotech1121 Hellam St.Monterrey, CA 93940 Phone: 630-628-1120Contact: Jim [email protected]

Quadex/Interfit USA4801 Crystal Hill Rd.North Little Rock, AR 72118 Phone: 501-758-8628Contact: Stuart [email protected]

Quality Systems, Inc./Permacrete1101 Menzler Rd.Nashville, TN 37210 Phone: 615-331-9200Contact: George [email protected]

Randolph Products33 Haynes Cir.Chicopee, MA 01020 Phone: [email protected]

Raven Lining Systems13105 East 61st St., Ste. ABroken Arrow, OK 74012 Phone: 800-324-2810Contact: Kaye [email protected]

REMA Corrosion Control, Inc.119 Rockland Ave.Northvale, NJ 07647 Phone: 440-781-6226Contact: Larry [email protected]

Rhino Linings Corporation9151 Rehco Rd.San Diego, CA 92121 Phone: 800-422-2603Contact: Tim [email protected]

Richard’s Paint Mfg. Co., Inc.200 Paint St.Rockledge, FL 32955 Phone: 800-432-0983Contact: Eric [email protected]

Riley Paint Company106 Washington St.Burlington, IA 52601 Phone: 319-759-2516Contact: John [email protected]

Rock-Tred Corporation405 Oakwood Ave.Waukegan, IL 60085 Phone: 847-673-8200Contact: Erik [email protected]

Rodda Paint Co./Cloverdale Paint6107 N. Marine Dr.Portland, OR 97203 Phone: 503-572-8201Contact: Tom [email protected]

RoofMart International Inc.2735 Rain Rd., PO Box 502Chapman, KS 67431 Phone: 800-345-1439Contact: Customer [email protected]

Roval USA Corp.12270 NW Luoto Ln.Carlton, OR 97111 Phone: 971-237-0958Contact: Aldo [email protected]

Royce International LLC3400 S. Tamiami TrailSarasota, FL 34239 Phone: 941-894-1228Contact: Christine [email protected]

Rust Bullet, LLC300 Brinkby Ave., Ste. 200Reno, NV 89509 Phone: 775-829-5606Contact: Kathline A. [email protected]

Safe Encasement Systems1795 N. Snow Canyon Pkwy., Unit 63St. George, UT 84770 Phone: 888-277-8834Contact: John [email protected]

Sampson Coatings1900 Ellen Rd.Richmond, VA 23230 Phone: 804-349-2820Contact: Joe [email protected]

Sauereisen, Inc.160 Gamma Dr.Pittsburgh, PA 15238 Phone: 412-963-0303Contact: Lake [email protected]

SaverSystems/Defy800 South 7th St.Richmond, IN 47374 Phone: 800-860-6327Contact: Customer [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles23

Seacoat Technology11215 Jones Rd. W., Ste. HHouston, TX 77065 Phone: 832-237-4400Contact: John [email protected]

Seal For Life IndustriesPart of Berry Plastics Engineered Materials DivisionGasselterstraat 20Stadskanaal, 9503JB NetherlandsPhone: 31 599 696170Contact: J.F. [email protected] our display ad, p. 88.

ShawCor CSI Services1607-10 St.Nisku, AB T9E 0A7 CanadaPhone: 403-218-8262Contact: Sam [email protected]

Sherwin-Williams101 Prospect Ave. NWCleveland, OH 44115 Phone: 800-524-5979Contact: Customer [email protected]/protectiveSee our display ads, pp. 40, 138, and 146.

Simco Coatings Inc.211 Gunther LaneBelle Chasse, LA 70037 Phone: 504-393-9455Contact: Paul [email protected]

Simpson Strong-TiePO Box 10789Pleasanton, CA 94588 Phone: 800-999-5099Contact: Edward [email protected]

SOPREMA310 Quadral Dr.Wadsworth, OH 44281 Phone: 800-356-3521Contact: Jason [email protected]

Soprema, Inc.1688 J.B. MichaudDrummondville, QC J2C 8E9 CanadaPhone: 819-478-8166Contact: Dennis [email protected]

SpecChem1511 Baltimore Ave.Kansas City, MO 64108 Phone: 866-791-8700Contact:Mike [email protected]

Specguard909 Mahar Ave.Wilmington, CA 90744 Phone: 310-834-7037Contact: Larry [email protected]

Specialty Products, Inc. (SPI)2410 104th St., Ct. S., Ste. DLakewood, WA 98499 Phone: 253-588-7101Contact: Chas [email protected]

SpectraShield Liner Systems4527 Sunbeam Rd.Jacksonville, FL 32257 Phone: 904-419-4889Contact: Bob [email protected]

SpeedCove Inc. DBA Solid Rock Enterprises5781 Pleasant Valley Rd.El Dorado, CA 95623 Phone: 530-344-9000Contact: Doug [email protected]

Sprayroq248 Cahaba Valley Pkwy.Pelham, AL 35124 Phone: 205-957-0020Contact: Jerry [email protected]

Stirling Lloyd Group Plc.Union Bank, King St.Knutsford, Cheshire, WA16 6EF UKPhone: 44-1565 633111Contact: Dave [email protected]

Stirling Lloyd Products Inc.152 Rockwell Rd., Bldg. ANewington, CT 06111 Phone: 860-666-5008Contact: Tom [email protected]

Sto Corp.3800 Camp Creek Pkwy.Atlanta, GA 30331 Phone: 678-553-3269Contact: Thomas [email protected]

SpeedCove3 wrule:Layout 1 10/9/09 3:21 P

The Strong Company, Inc.4505 Emmett Sanders Rd.Pine Bluff, AR 71601 Phone: 870-535-7617Contact: Billy [email protected]

Sub-One Technology4464 Willow Rd., Bldg. 103Pleasanton, CA 94588 Phone: 925-924-1020Contact: Dore [email protected]

Subsea Industries NVHaven 29 - Noorderlaan 9Antwerp, 2030 BelgiumPhone: 32-3 213 53 18Contact:Manuel [email protected]

Sulzer Metco1101 Prospect Ave.Westbury, NY 11590 Phone: 800-638-2699Contact: Customer [email protected]

Superior Epoxies & Coatings Inc.2527 Lantrac Ct.Decatur, GA 30035 Phone: 800-240-1310Contact: John [email protected]

Sureshield Coatings Company350 Northgate Pkwy.Wheeling, IL 60090 Phone: 847-291-6960Contact:Michael [email protected]

TCI Coatings Inc.220 Industrial Blvd.Austin, TX 78745 Phone: 512-444-2824Contact: Kevin [email protected]

Termarust Technologies8150 Rue de L’IndustrieMontreal, QC H1J 1S7 CanadaPhone: 888-279-5497Contact: Craig [email protected] our display ad, p. 47.

Tesla NanoCoatings, Inc.6200 Frank Ave. NW Advanced Technical Center, T101North Canton, OH 44720 Phone: 610-764-1232Contact: Joe [email protected]

Coating Company Profiles24

Textured Coatings of America2422 E. 15th St.Panama City, FL 32405 Phone: 800-454-0340Contact: Regina [email protected]

ThermionPO Box 780Silverdale, WA 98383 Phone: 877-884-3428Contact: Dean [email protected]

Thin Film Technology, Inc.802 Utah St.South Houston, TX 77587 Phone: 713-910-6200Contact: Jeff [email protected]

The Thortex Group12 Iron Bridge Dr.Collegeville, PA 19426 Phone: 610-831-0222Contact: Kevin [email protected]

3L&T Inc.897 Independence Ave., #1BMountain View, CA 94043 Phone: 650-625-0177Contact: Linas [email protected]

3M Atlanta3700 Atlanta Industrial Pkwy.Atlanta, GA 30331 Phone: 404-696-2730Contact: Abdul Razzak3m.com

3M Electrical Markets Division6801 River Pl. Blvd., 147-4N-01Austin, TX 78726 Phone: 512-984-7801Contact:Michelle [email protected]/corrosion

TMS Manufacturing Co.3555 W. 123rd St.Alsip, IL 60803 Phone: 708-385-6633Contact:Michael [email protected]

TMS Metalizing Systems, Ltd.7665 NW Eldorado Blvd., #101Bremerton, WA 98312 Phone: 360-692-6656Contact: Dave [email protected]

Tnemec Company, Inc.515 E. Main St.Boonville, IN 47601 Phone: 812-449-0167Contact:Michael [email protected]

Tnemec Company, Inc.6800 Corporate Dr.Kansas City, MO 64120 Phone: 816-483-3400Contact:Mark [email protected]

Total Containment Solutions Inc.11000 Metro Pkwy., Ste. 20Fort Myers, FL 33966 Phone: 239-275-6235Contact:Michael [email protected]

Total Wall390 Viking Cir.Rio, WI 53960 Phone: 888-702-9915Contact: Octavian [email protected]

TPR2 Corporation36 Plains Rd.Essex, CT 06426 Phone: 860-767-8772Contact: Brian [email protected]

Transpo Industries Inc.20 Jones St.New Rochelle, NY 10801 Phone: 914-636-1000Contact: John [email protected]

Trenton Corporation7700 Jackson Rd.Ann Arbor, MI 48103 Contact: Frank Ramptontrentoncorp.com

Tuf Top Coatings4590 60th Ave. N.St. Petersburg, FL 33714 Phone: 727-527-3382Contact: Greg [email protected]

U.S. Coatings, LLCPO Box 220313St. Louis, MO 63122 Phone: 314-205-1500Contact: Larry [email protected]

Ultimate Linings6630 Roxburgh Ave., #175Houston, TX 77041 Phone: 562-802-8834Contact: Stacy [email protected]

US Coating Solutions5948 Emerson Ave.Minneapolis, MN 55419 Phone: 386-313-3033Contact: Garry [email protected]

VersaFlex Incorporated686 S. Adams St.Kansas City, KS 66105 Phone: 913-321-9000Contact: Todd [email protected]

Visuron Technologies Inc.5174 McGinnis Ferry Rd.Ste. 106Alpharetta, GA 30005 Phone: 770-815-4548Contact: Tim [email protected]

W.R. Meadows300 Industrial Dr.Hampshire, IL 60140 Phone: 800-342-5976Contact: Jason [email protected]

Walla Walla Environmental4 West Rees Ave.Walla Walla, WA 99362 Phone: 509-522-0490Contact: Cassie [email protected]

Wasser Corporation4118 B Pl. NW, Ste. BAuburn, WA 98001 Phone: 800-627-2968Contact: Kevin [email protected] our display ad, p. 143.

Watson Coatings, Inc.325 Paul Ave.St. Louis, MO 63135 Phone: 314-521-2000Contact: Paul [email protected] our display ad, p. 51.

Westcoat770 Gateway Center Dr.San Diego, CA 92102 Phone: 800-250-4519Contact: Dean [email protected]

WFI Global, LLC4118 Robertson Rd.Madison, WI 53714 Phone: 618-978-1119Contact: Gary [email protected]

Whitford Corporation47 Park Ave.Elverson, PA 19520 Phone: 610-286-3500Contact: Brian [email protected]

Wilko Paint, Inc.2727 OhioWichita, KS 67219 Phone: 800-658-3799Contact: Don [email protected]

Williams-Hayward Protective Coatings7425 West 59th St.Summit, IL 60501 Phone: 708-563-5182Contact: Edward [email protected]

ZRC Worldwide145 Enterprise Dr.Marshfield, MA 02050 Phone: 800-831-3275Contact: Lorraine [email protected]