Submitted by LameTrouT t3_y4uwpp in askscience
Br4veSirRobin t1_isghn1y wrote
Reply to comment by shouldco in How come some Galvanized steel panel have patterns? by LameTrouT
It's called galvanneal and it is used in painted car panels. After dipping in zinc the steel goes through a furnace to slow nucleation-crystallization. It is a matte gray finish and paint sticks to it very well.
LameTrouT OP t1_isgicpz wrote
I believe they must do this for hand rails ls that get a color after getting gavinized?
Br4veSirRobin t1_isgj7kg wrote
The patterns on the surface of galvanized steel are called 'spangle'. People who use galv steel order spangle size. Antimony is used in the molten zinc bath for spangle size control among other process controls. Metallurgist here.
Br4veSirRobin t1_isgirrk wrote
True. Any painted galvanize is is usually galvanneal. I was a metallurgical engineer in both carbon steel and titanium.
shouldco t1_isgmwn7 wrote
Thank you, I was unfamiliar with that industrial application.
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