KENAT
Mechanical
- Jun 12, 2006
- 18,387
What is standard practice for specifying paint on commercial drawings in the US?
On military drawings in the UK we used to call up the type of paint or paint system to a DEF STAN (like a Mil std) and the color to a British Standard (can’t recall the number but it was virtually a book of color samples like you get from Home Depot or somewhere, each color had an ID).
I didn’t really work on commercial drawings but from what I recall on the few I saw we’d specify the paint system, typically supplier and their part number, and the color either from the British Standard or the vendors designation system.
Here they just say things like ‘POWDER COAT BLUE’ or ‘PAINT BLACK’ which I can’t help think may not be adequate. Sometimes they refer to paint chips for color but it seems inconsistent at best.
So what is commercial best practice in the US?
Thanks,
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...
On military drawings in the UK we used to call up the type of paint or paint system to a DEF STAN (like a Mil std) and the color to a British Standard (can’t recall the number but it was virtually a book of color samples like you get from Home Depot or somewhere, each color had an ID).
I didn’t really work on commercial drawings but from what I recall on the few I saw we’d specify the paint system, typically supplier and their part number, and the color either from the British Standard or the vendors designation system.
Here they just say things like ‘POWDER COAT BLUE’ or ‘PAINT BLACK’ which I can’t help think may not be adequate. Sometimes they refer to paint chips for color but it seems inconsistent at best.
So what is commercial best practice in the US?
Thanks,
KENAT, probably the least qualified checker you'll ever meet...